Home Improvement Asked by Devin Melo on March 24, 2021
I recently came across someone who was throwing away an old craftsman air-tank and compressor. They claimed the compressor did now work anymore as it would never build pressure.
I had an old compressor laying around from project involving an airhorn. I understand that the compressor I have is not necessarily made for the purpose I intend but I had it laying around and thought I could simply remove the old compressor, replace it with mine, rewire it and call it a day.
The compressor for the airhorn has only a power and ground while the 3-prong has white, black and green. From the compressor I ran red (power) to the black on the 3 prong, capped off the white (neutral) and connected both grounds (green on the 3 prong and black on the compressor) to a bracket I had to attach to the tank. Plugged it in and nothing works. The compressor worked before I pulled it off the truck.
Any advice? Did I wire this correctly?
No, and the dead giveaway is the colors of wire on the former compressor.
Red and black are colors used for low voltage wiring on vehicles. Black is the normal current return path. And because vehicle 12V/24V is not particularly dangerous, they just use the vehicle chassis as the current return path. There is no safety ground on vehicle wiring. The thing you call "ground" is in fact the current return (negative usually).
Black and white are colors used in AC "mains" 120V power. Black is "hot" and white is "neutral". Neutral is a concept new to you: It is the normal current return path, but it is separately wired, insulated, and treated same as a hot conductor. Because 120V is dangerous.
Then there's a totally separate safety ground, which handles ONLY fault currents. Nothing should ever be electrically connected to this; it only handles current during emergencies.
So because of the way the term "ground" is used in different environments, you got different things confused.
However, the big mistake was connecting a 12V or 24V compressor to 120V and expecting the electricity elves to take care of making that work.
That compressor is fried. It's a goner.
Correct answer by Harper - Reinstate Monica on March 24, 2021
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