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James Sweet James Sweet is offline
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Default OT - electric motor issue



"Smitty Two" wrote in message
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Our air compressor at work is powered by a 5hp, single phase, 230 volt
motor. Often when the compressor tries to start again (triggered by
falling tank pressure) the breaker trips. By rotating the motor by hand
prior to resetting the breaker, the motor will then start. Since this
happens between two and five times per day, we're getting tired of it.

The nameplate says the motor draws 24 full load amps, so I had the
electrician (who was there for another job) pull the motor off the 20
amp breaker and put it on a 30 amp. (wire gauge sufficiency verified.)

Still trips, and not knowing what else to do, I replaced the motor
starting capacitors.

That didn't fix it. So, before taking this to a motor repair shop, or
replacing it, is there anything else an idiot could look at and possibly
fix? TIA.



The starting amps are much higher than the full load amps, for a 5HP motor
you're probably looking at around 100A for a split second as it starts up. I
suspect the wire run is long, or you have some resistance somewhere which is
delaying the motor getting up to speed long enough for the breaker to trip.
One option is to run the circuit with heavier wire, though a likely better
option is to install an unloader valve on the compressor which will greatly
reduce inrush. These release the pressure on the line between the compressor
and the valve so that the motor isn't working against the tank pressure when
it starts up. Also if you haven't changed the oil in the compressor recently
that wouldn't hurt.