Electrical – Condensor went, HVAC guy is blaming electrician, is this possible

air-conditioningcircuit breakerelectricalhvacwiring

My brand new HVAC unit, the condensor died. The unit has a sticker that says the following:

Minimum Circuit Ampacity 32 amps
Max Fuse / Breaker 50

The electrician ran a 8 gauge wire with a 40 amp breaker to the ac. The HVAC guy is telling me it should have been a 50 amp circuit with a 6 gauge wire.

The HVAC guy has replaced the condensor, the electrician has replaced the 40 amp breaker with a 50 amp, but did not run a 6 gauge line.

The HVAC guy wants $750 for his work on replacing the condensor on the brand new unit he installed.

So I guess my questions are:

  1. Is this even possible for the condensor to burn out due to the lack of electric to it?

  2. Was the electrician clearly at fault, or should the unit have worked on a 40AMP breaker?

  3. Is the HVAC guy at any fault for not checking the electrical runs before installing the unit?

  4. Is the run of 50amp breaker on a 8 gauge wire safe/sufficient/proper?

I'm in the middle of a finger pointing game and I am the one get stuck with the bills here. Thanks for any help!

Best Answer

Per the National Electric Code (assuming you are in the US), #8 is for up to 40A, the Minimum Circuit Ampacity (MCA) was 32A, so there was no issue with the wire size he initially selected. The MCA rating is based on the 125% factors already, so you do NOT need to do them again if you already have that number available to you on the nameplate.

Bottom line, the HVAC guy is just trying to dodge responsibility for a defective product.

Also, a "buzzing" sound would not be coming from the breaker unless it was loose. That sound was likely the result of a failed starting capacitor.