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  • May 9, 2007, 11:09 AM
    pjg9597
    Hampton Bay Ceiling Fan
    I have a two year old Hampton Bay 52" Ceiling Fan with lifetime motor warranty that I bought from Home Depot. Turns out that this fan was supplied by a company called SMC in Atlanta Georgia. Two days ago, the fan was running on high and it began to slow down. It got slower and slower until it was barely rotating. We turned it off and then back on and it barely began to turn. Reversing directions didn't improve the RPM's.

    Upon contacting SMC, they concluded the capacitor was going bad and asked me to call them back with some number stamped on the capacitor so they could in turn identify the part and ship it to me. I am to dismantle the lighting housing and find this capacitor behind or within some small housing within the fan case.

    Question: Is there a way to determine the specifications of the capacitor and purchase it locally?
  • May 9, 2007, 11:34 AM
    pjg9597
    Ceiling fan capacitor help
    Most ceiling fans use a type of motor known as a "permanent split capacitor motor". These motors have two coils, a "start" and a "run" winding. A capacitor is connected in series with the start winding to insert a phase shift, but once the motor is up to speed it becomes an auxiliary winding. In order to reverse the motor, the capacitor is applied to the "run" winding which then becomes the "start" winding. In some cases the windings may have taps to provide different speeds, in others the value of the start/run capacitor is lowered to provide lower speeds. Yet other designs will have additional capacitors wired in series with the motor as a whole to regulate speeds.


    Signs of a bad capacitor in a ceiling fan include:

    # Fan runs slowly or not at all on all speeds
    # Fan will not start but will spin if started by hand
    # Certain speeds are slow or do not work
    # The motor hums and turns freely by hand but will not spin

    The capacitor is usually a black box inside the switch housing of the fan. If this box appears burnt or melted in any way, that is also the sign of a bad capacitor and it should be replaced.

    Replacing a capacitor is easy, you simply unhook the wires, and hook the new one in it's place. The only difficulty is finding an appropriate replacement capacitor. Within a certain degree of tolerance, the values of the replacement have to match the values of the original capacitor. In fans with two wire capacitors this is easy, capacitors are measured in "microfarads" (ex. 4uf) and you simply install a replacement 4 microfarad (4 uf) capacitor in it's place. However fans that use more than one capacitor for speed regulation will often have a capacitor with more than one value, and, therefore, more than two wires. For example, a three wire capacitor (ex. 7uf+2.5uf) is simply two capacitors (a 7uf and a 2.5uf) sharing the same casing and one common wire. For capacitors with more than 3 wires, usually there is a schematic drawn on the side explaining the various values.

    In any case, you determine the number of wires and appropriate value(s) for the capacitor. When obtaining a replacement, first check with the manufacturer as they may have an exact match. Capacitors can also be purchased from ceiling fan parts sites (for around $15 each), on eBay, and at hardware stores, home centers, and other places that carry ceiling fans. If you can not find values that match exactly, a difference of +/- one microfarad (1uf) or so should not make a significant difference.

    Lastly, older fans may use oil-filled capacitors mounted inside the motor housing. These fan be replaced with newer, smaller capacitors, but the larger metal capacitors are available from electrical supply houses and motor shops. Contact [email protected] for more details.
  • Dec 22, 2007, 12:03 AM
    ceilingfanrepair
    Hey, that answer looks familiar!

    Ceiling fan capactors - troubleshooting and resources - Ceiling Fans N More

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