Packard TRCFD455 45+5MFD 440/370V Round Run Condensatore sostituisce PRCFD455 polipropilene

Brand:TITAN PRO

3.7/5

28.69

Per il dielettrico viene utilizzato un film di polipropilene metallizzato dai bordi pesanti. EIA-456-A e IEC 60252-1:2001. Costruito secondo i più severi standard internazionali per i condensatori di funzionamento del motore CA, inclusi EIA-456-A e. FLESSIBILE - Il design Titan PRO 440/370 volt riduce l'inventario Titan PRO 370 volt offre il meglio della categoria. AFFIDABILE - 60.000 ore di vita operativa.

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Per il dielettrico viene utilizzato un film di polipropilene metallizzato dai bordi pesanti. EIA-456-A e IEC 60252-1:2001. Costruito secondo i più severi standard internazionali per i condensatori di funzionamento del motore CA, inclusi EIA-456-A e. FLESSIBILE - Il design Titan PRO 440/370 volt riduce l'inventario Titan PRO 370 volt offre il meglio della categoria. AFFIDABILE - 60.000 ore di vita operativa.
Brand TITAN PRO
Capacitance 45 Microfarad
Material Polypropylene
Operating Voltage 370 Volts
Shape Round

3.7

6 Review
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Scritto da: Rick
The part was right on the money.
What I did was changed the part to the new one and clean my air conditioner. All was good to go.
Scritto da: Jazzman
This $8 part saved me a $350 service call.
I have a very large home (7300sf) with dual phase Carrier AC system for the first and lower level, and a second system (heat pump) for the 2nd floor and loft level. Last summer the upper level unit stopped working. Called an AC tech who took roughly two hours to figure out what was wrong. The outside unit stopped cutting on. Finally he replaced the capacitor and $350 later the AC was working again. Fast forward 8 months later. The same thing began to happen with the unit for the first and lower level. I was standing out front and could hear a whining sound coming from the side of the house. I went to investigate. The fan on the compressor appeared as if it was stuck. I pulled the breaker and stuck a rod through the top grill to push the blade to see if the fan motor had seized up. I was able to move it and pushed it until it made a single revolution. I put the breaker back in and the unit kicked on with the fan running. 2 months later I noticed that the first floor of house was warm although the AC was running. I checked the temp of the air coming out of the register and found it to be warm. I checked the unit outside and sure enough not only was the fan not spinning, the was not running at all. Immediately I'm thinking the entire compressor is gone, which I had already thought would eventually happen but simply monitored it listening for the whining and humming sound I heard before. I contacted an AC tech that I used in the past since I knew he'd give me a far price, but for some reason the guy couldn't make it that day. But then he never came when he said he would nor did he return any of our calls. We had a friend reach out to someone who knew a guy, who knew a guy yada, yada... At this point the outside temperature was getting milder due to the amount and frequency of rain here on the east coast so there was no rush to spend upwards of $3000 to have the unit replaced. I just so happened to google the symptoms trying to determine if the entire unit needed to be replaced or if there was a way to replace the fan/motor assembly for less than the cost of a replacement compressor. Low and behold the very first YouTube video I came across, there's a guys describing the exact same set of symptoms, first the fan didn't turn on, he pushed it like I did and it ran for about another month, then the entire unit stopped working. He replaced the capacitor while videoing the repair and within ten minutes he had the unit running. Needless to say, I did the exact same thing and had my system running in 5. The biggest issue was finding the right one and then deciding which brand to trust. I called Carrier to try to find the OEM part number without having to open the unit up until I was ready to fix it. They refused to give it to me due to liability (such BS, my warranty is over), they obviously did not want to take business away from their dealers. I was able to get the part number from a distributor and also found out that Carrier doesn't make their own parts anyway and typically uses multiple Chinese made brands. I chose this one due to it's popularity among HVAC companies. Works like a charm.. I bought two so I'd have a spare at the ready in the event the same thing happens again.. 4 screws and less than 10 minutes of work and I saved myself $300+ on this repair. I won't know the reliability of the part until the unit is running until the temperature changes. but for now, the problem has been resolved with a $6 part ($8 with Prime Delivery). As for the guy who came to fix it the last time this happened, he obviously did not know what he was doing. Screwed up my Smart Thermostat and ended installing the old Honeywell unit thinking it was the stat that was causing the unit not to kick on. I guy I will be doing my own HVAC repairs from now on unless the unit need to be replaced or it's too hot to go into the attack (but then I'd just at night when it's cooler).
Scritto da: Ryan
Got it running again
Got my ac unit back up and running
Scritto da: J. L.
2yrs Later and This Backup Came In Handy!
Summer of 2020 in a desert heat with temps of 110+ deg F, my AC unit went out. All the HVAC companies didn't have any available techs to look at the problem. The HVAC owner that did the AC install 2yrs prior didn't have any techs for 48hrs but was able to diagnose issue over the phone. I went to his job site to buy a capacitor off of him for $90 and do the repair myself. I decided to buy this cap for $11 and keep it as a backup. Fast forward 2yrs, my AC went again at the start of summer and we're teetering in the low 100's. In 2hrs that my AC went out my home went from 79degF to 94degF. Grabbed this spare and was able to get the AC working in about 15min. I'm purchasing this cap again and keeping it as a backup. Saves me money on the cost HVAC comp charges, tech fees, and possible hotel costs because HVAC techs unavailability.
Scritto da: Arnold gramajo
Shut power off at breaker box
Make sure all power is off at circuit box before installing. Sorry old unit out before removing.
Scritto da: C. Cooper
Still Running 1 year later!
The media could not be loaded. So in September 2019 my AC stopped working. You could hear the fan motor kick on, but the blades would not start spinning or moving faster. After some searching I was able to deduce that my run capacitor needed to be replaced. The top of the old one (pictured) had begun to bevel upwards. I was able to get this replacement in a few days and have the unit back up and running. It has now been almost a whole year and it still seems to be running. Make sure to look up online how to safely remove and discharge your old capacitor. The pictures are of the box that the new Packard capacitor came in and my old capacitor. Definitely beats paying $200-$500 for a replacement and labor. UPDATE: So its been about a week after I posted this review.. We had a bad storm and the power went out, don't know if that contributed to it.. However, we woke up the next morning and the outside AC condenser unit was not running. I recall it had sounded like it was having trouble earlier this season starting (making some noise or lagging). Just pulled off this Titan capacitor and tested it. The HERM side has gone bad while the Fan still seems to be ok checking with a multimeter. I did end up ordering another one. Perhaps will order a different brand as a back up like the one that has a warranty. Albeit, for $10.89 I guess it served its purpose. I still had the old capacitor, so I updated the photos for a side by side. The older capacitor beveled on top and bottom when it went bad and the Titan looks normal..

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