My dishwasher was failing, and I quickly found the problem was a failing capacitor on the circulation pump.
Marked as 2.5uF 400V. No problem, except not easily found locally. So I rummage around and find an old fluorescent lamp with a power-factor correction capacitor of the right value. Well, labelled as 3.5uF which would probably be near enough, but tests as 2.5. Normal to degrade with age? So I hook it up and Bob's your uncle. My question: is this a long-term solution? Why is "motor start capacitor" a special category? Does it matter if the case is metal vs plastic? If the temperature range and voltage spec is good, what potential problem is there?
The only thing I can think of is waterproofing, but the rest of the electrical/electronic parts in there are not waterfproofed.
Marked as 2.5uF 400V. No problem, except not easily found locally. So I rummage around and find an old fluorescent lamp with a power-factor correction capacitor of the right value. Well, labelled as 3.5uF which would probably be near enough, but tests as 2.5. Normal to degrade with age? So I hook it up and Bob's your uncle. My question: is this a long-term solution? Why is "motor start capacitor" a special category? Does it matter if the case is metal vs plastic? If the temperature range and voltage spec is good, what potential problem is there?
The only thing I can think of is waterproofing, but the rest of the electrical/electronic parts in there are not waterfproofed.