Electrical Troubleshooting
Electrical troubleshooting for light commercial refrigeration including contactor diagnostics, overload protector testing, ECM motor service, capacitor testing, and reading wiring diagrams.
- Test contactors, overload protectors, and start components using a multimeter
- Diagnose ECM motor failures and distinguish from controller problems
- Read and interpret wiring diagrams for light commercial refrigeration systems
- Safely measure voltage, amperage, and resistance in operating refrigeration circuits
Leçon 1
Electrical Safety and Basic Measurements
Electrical Safety for Refrigeration Service
Light commercial refrigeration operates on 115V single-phase (plug-in units) or 208-230V single-phase and three-phase (hardwired units). Electrical shock, arc flash, and equipment damage are real risks during troubleshooting.
Essential safety practices:
- Always verify voltage with a known-good meter before assuming a circuit is de-energized
- Use Lock-Out Tag-Out (LOTO) when working inside electrical panels
- Use Category III or higher rated multimeters for commercial service
- Never work on live circuits above 50V unless specifically trained and equipped
- Wear safety glasses when working near electrical connections
Voltage Measurements
Measure voltage at key points to isolate electrical failures:
| Measurement Point | Expected Voltage | If Low or Absent |
|---|---|---|
| Disconnect switch | Line voltage (208-230V) | Tripped breaker, blown fuse |
| Contactor load side | Line voltage when energized | Bad contactor contacts |
| Compressor terminals | Line voltage when running | Check overload, wiring |
| Fan motor terminals | Line voltage when running | Check switch, relay, wiring |
| Control transformer secondary | 24 VAC | Bad transformer, blown fuse |
Voltage Drop Under Load
Always measure voltage under load (while the equipment is trying to run). A circuit may read full voltage with no load but drop significantly when the compressor starts. A voltage drop of more than 10% from nameplate indicates undersized wiring, loose connections, or a failing contactor. Low voltage causes high amp draw, overheating, and premature compressor failure.
Always measure voltage under load at the compressor terminals - a circuit that reads full voltage unloaded but drops more than 10% under load indicates a wiring, connection, or contactor problem that will damage the compressor.