dmccarty
Super Star Member
We heat the house with a wood stove, but last week, when the temperatures were down in single digits and the highs were in the low/mid 20s, the wood stove could not keep up with the cold.
That meant the living room was at 72 instead of 80 and the Wifey was not happy. :laughing: I wanted to kickup the heat in the house so I turned on the heat pump which ran for a few minutes and then made a rather scary loud noise. :shocked: I went out side and the fan had stopped running so we turned off the heat pump. Emergency heat works but the fan will not start. Last time this happened was during a heat streak where we had 100 plus temperatures for well over a week. The cause was a bad start/run capacitor. I looked at the capacitor and it is not bulging like the one during the high heat conditions.
I have the service manual and I want to test the capacitor but I need to safely discharge the capacitor. The manual says to discharge with a 20-30 ohm resistor. Is there another way?
I have read some information on the Internet on how to do this, but I trust the TBN Brain trust far more than some article written by who knows who posted on the Internet. :laughing::laughing::laughing:
I really don't want to get lit up by a capacitor the size of a beer can. :shocked::shocked::shocked:
Thanks,
Dan
I have the service manual and I want to test the capacitor but I need to safely discharge the capacitor. The manual says to discharge with a 20-30 ohm resistor. Is there another way?
I have read some information on the Internet on how to do this, but I trust the TBN Brain trust far more than some article written by who knows who posted on the Internet. :laughing::laughing::laughing:
I really don't want to get lit up by a capacitor the size of a beer can. :shocked::shocked::shocked:
Thanks,
Dan