No cap. Evaporator motors, I've never seen a cap.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
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..
"Steve Kraus" wrote in
message
m...
DanG wrote:
These fans are well under $20 at an appliance parts house.
Let's
think about a fan expected to run in sub zero or low digit
temperatures. I can't imagine any reason for the
lubricants to
become sluggish, can you?
Actually it's $120-130 based on two online sources.
Just to be sure, this is not the kind of motor that uses a
capacitor,
right? I don't want to buy a new motor and find out that
the problem was
really a 5 dollar cap that's gone bad.