KUXJ
Aug 4, 2009, 06:17 PM
You guys are going to love this.
Basements getting humid.
I go down to check why Dehumidifier isn't kicking on.
No matter where I set Humidistat it won't go on, yes its plugged in.
I'm a curious kind of guy so I pull the cover, and looked it over to check the obvious, then get my trusty Triplett 630-A, start doin' continuity checks, I was getting infinite resistance from the humidistat, I checked the voltage going to it and found 143 volts, we've always been high here.
I checked on the web, and found a replacement for $38.95+7.99 for shipping, two others were $50+ ship.. parts are not in stock, 2week backorder.
I call two Local suppliers $52+ship 1week back... So...
What I did was, hooked a regular light switch to the humidistat leads, made sure it was off then plugged it back in, flipped the switch back on, an lo an behold it started running, its been running for 5 maybe 6hours now, and the switch, and where I have it plugged in are running cool. No heat.
Plus it's doing the job it was intended for, dehumidifying.
As you can see by the pix, there are three ratingsFull Locked Resistive
Full I'm not too worried 'bout, Resistive would be in the variability of the humidistat, but the lock is in case the motor shaft locks, right? And if that's the case, then it'll trip the breaker?
I also feel that since the light switch is allowing full current to go through, then its acting as if the humidistat is turned the whole way up. Right? Wrong?
Now for my question.. Is there any inherent danger in doing this, until I get a new switch?
My DW is aware of this situation. We have no children. One cat. Wire used to make connections from unit leads to switch 12AWG. Connections are insulated and taped, switch is in U/L approved box and attached to the side of cabinet.
Thoughts?
K
Basements getting humid.
I go down to check why Dehumidifier isn't kicking on.
No matter where I set Humidistat it won't go on, yes its plugged in.
I'm a curious kind of guy so I pull the cover, and looked it over to check the obvious, then get my trusty Triplett 630-A, start doin' continuity checks, I was getting infinite resistance from the humidistat, I checked the voltage going to it and found 143 volts, we've always been high here.
I checked on the web, and found a replacement for $38.95+7.99 for shipping, two others were $50+ ship.. parts are not in stock, 2week backorder.
I call two Local suppliers $52+ship 1week back... So...
What I did was, hooked a regular light switch to the humidistat leads, made sure it was off then plugged it back in, flipped the switch back on, an lo an behold it started running, its been running for 5 maybe 6hours now, and the switch, and where I have it plugged in are running cool. No heat.
Plus it's doing the job it was intended for, dehumidifying.
As you can see by the pix, there are three ratingsFull Locked Resistive
Full I'm not too worried 'bout, Resistive would be in the variability of the humidistat, but the lock is in case the motor shaft locks, right? And if that's the case, then it'll trip the breaker?
I also feel that since the light switch is allowing full current to go through, then its acting as if the humidistat is turned the whole way up. Right? Wrong?
Now for my question.. Is there any inherent danger in doing this, until I get a new switch?
My DW is aware of this situation. We have no children. One cat. Wire used to make connections from unit leads to switch 12AWG. Connections are insulated and taped, switch is in U/L approved box and attached to the side of cabinet.
Thoughts?
K