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185 points hhs | 10 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source | bottom
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elawler24 ◴[] No.41832117[source]
My dad bought a failing HVAC business 30+ years ago, then made it profitable over the years and sold it back to his employees last year. He had the option to take a few highly lucrative PE deals, but it was clear they would squeeze the life out of the employees and customers he had worked hard to support over many years. I can’t imagine how low quality this kind of trade work will become if PE owns them all. It will be similar to vet, dentist, and dermatology clinics which now feel like factories that don’t care about the humans on the other end - often employing fear tactics and sales quotas to incentivize upsells.
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heymijo ◴[] No.41832822[source]
> often employing fear tactics and sales quotas to incentivize upsells

This already happens. The most common AC repair needed is a new capacitor. It's a $20 part.

Call your dad's business, you probably get a quote for $100-ish and it's fixed in ten minutes.

Call a PE owned shop and they are likely to tell you that your entire system needs replaced. Quote $5-$8k.

Reports like this are already common place, and the roll-ups of former small-businesses in industry like HVAC that the PE people celebrate will only make this worse for customers.

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nradov ◴[] No.41833524[source]
Could someone ELI5 why AC capacitors are so fragile? I had one fail last year on a unit that was just out of warranty.
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1. gh02t ◴[] No.41833841[source]
Most are electrolytic for practical reasons including cost and available capacity+voltage rating. Electrolytes in the capacitors dry out in the hot weather as well as other things like other components going bad and drawing too much current, both of which cause further overheating. Overheating makes the electrolyte dry even faster (making the capacitance plummet and resistance increase, i.e. stop capacitoring) and generate gasses (=>swell/pop).

Tldr hot weather is hard on them. They have a finite lifetime and suffer most when you need the AC the most.

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2. steve_adams_86 ◴[] No.41834392[source]
Are more robust capacitor designs not an option because the capacitive properties of the paper ones are better for the use case?
replies(1): >>41835975 #
3. himinlomax ◴[] No.41834931[source]
Aren't electrolytic caps polarized? That can't be used for AC. Iirc these capacitors are film types instead.
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4. ssl-3 ◴[] No.41835931[source]
Non-polarized electrolytics are somewhat uncommon, but they definitely do exist. They get used rather frequently in things like crossover networks for loudspeakers[0].

They tend to cost more, and tend to be larger than their polarized kins. They're not advantageous in circuits that always have some DC bias, so they only get used where it is necessary.

0: https://www.bennic.com.tw/en/ec/index.asp

5. ssl-3 ◴[] No.41835975[source]
More robust capacitors exist. They just cost more.

In HVAC world, the practical differences between a motor start cap and a motor run cap are price, physical size, and longevity.

A start cap is cheaper, but is meant only for intermittent duty and is unsuitable for use as a run cap.

Meanwhile, a run cap costs more but can serve as a run cap or a start cap.

All things (except for outliers like the McLaren F1) are built down to a price.

6. ◴[] No.41836260[source]
7. trq01758 ◴[] No.41836281[source]
For AC these units use non polarized, oil-filled metallized polypropylene film capacitors. But overheating is a problem for them, as it is for electrolytics.
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8. Log_out_ ◴[] No.41840066[source]
Would be neat to have an AC to keep the electronics nice and cool.
9. sidewndr46 ◴[] No.41840234[source]
No one uses an electrolytic type capacitor for the 60 Hz winding of a "single-phase" induction motor.
10. gh02t ◴[] No.41851279[source]
Indeed, I did some basic double checking before I posted but I guess the info I read was bogus+I was also having a brain fart to not know better because you're definitely right. Thanks for correcting.