Eyeballing Doesn’t Cut It
In addition to airflow problems, one of the biggest killers of a compressor is a weak run capacitor. Many technicians think that if a run capacitor is weak it will either leak its internal fluid or the casing will be swollen. So if these two conditions aren’t visibly noticed the capacitor is assumed to be okay. This simply isn’t the case, as there are millions of weak capacitors in operation this very day because they aren’t being tested, just visually verified. To make matters worse, the visual verification method is even listed in some quality maintenance checklist, so the assumptions continue. In order to truly verify a capacitor is firing within its specified tolerance range it has to be tested.
Some technicians including myself were taught to look at the swing of a needle on an analog multimeter to determine if a capacitor was firing properly. Unfortunately this doesn’t tell you how strong the capacitor is it only tells you that it’s storing and releasing a charge.