JFletcher
Senior Member
- Location
- Williamsburg, VA
Seems to be a conflict with your original post saying a 0.22A motor. Don't see how 0.22A is realistic for a PTAC. Perhaps 22A? What's the voltage at the service? What size wire was run to the receptacles?Thanks all. I'm at my whit's end trying to fix these units. They simply suck, and I think it's a design flaw. A nearly brand new 9k BTU unit in tip-top shape cannot cool a small hotel room on even a moderately warm day. Amana has been no help. Grasping at straws here.... heck, 20 year old (which is ancient by PTAC standards) GE 7k units work better...
smartmoney: they are 208 1ph units that are running around 200V at the receptacle.
Thanks all. I'm at my whit's end trying to fix these units. They simply suck, and I think it's a design flaw. A nearly brand new 9k BTU unit in tip-top shape cannot cool a small hotel room on even a moderately warm day. Amana has been no help. Grasping at straws here.... heck, 20 year old (which is ancient by PTAC standards) GE 7k units work better...
smartmoney: they are 208 1ph units that are running around 200V at the receptacle.
Seems to be a conflict with your original post saying a 0.22A motor. Don't see how 0.22A is realistic for a PTAC. Perhaps 22A? What's the voltage at the service? What size wire was run to the receptacles?
Thanks all. I'm at my whit's end trying to fix these units. They simply suck, and I think it's a design flaw. A nearly brand new 9k BTU unit in tip-top shape cannot cool a small hotel room on even a moderately warm day. Amana has been no help. Grasping at straws here.... heck, 20 year old (which is ancient by PTAC standards) GE 7k units work better...
smartmoney: they are 208 1ph units that are running around 200V at the receptacle.
The motor says right on the nameplate that it accepts 208V, you are wasting your time. Just hook it up. All motor voltages are designed for at least +-10%, on 230V motors under 5HP they are generally built as capable of 200-240V for this very reason.
There are gobs of 230V motors that say "usable at 208V" on the nameplate.I recently did some research on this subject and the information I read disputes this. I am not presenting the veracity of this information, but it made sense when I read it. It drew the conclusion that a nominal voltage of 208 should be using a 200 volt motor, just as motors are not rated 240, they are rated 230 and that rating is applicable to a 240 volt system. I believe it was a Baldor paper that had that information. It went on to state that a 208/230 motor will have a lower life when run at 208 that has voltage dips.
There are gobs of 230V motors that say "usable at 208V" on the nameplate.