Blower motor popping circuit breaker

dallan1

Recruit
Joined
Feb 28, 2021
Messages
4
My blower motor will pop the push button circuit breaker after a few minutes. When I reset it will run again for awhile and then pop. I dont see any obvious issues, any suggestions before I dig into this problem?
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
16,313
Resistance within a circuit increases the current.

Check your power and ground connections
 

Chris1956

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 25, 2004
Messages
28,073
Push button circuit breakers do wear out. Blowers can also get corroded. A resistance check on the blower circuit can tell you what is wrong. Alternatively, you could replace the circuit breaker with a fuse, rated for the current draw of the blower and see if it blows.
 

dallan1

Recruit
Joined
Feb 28, 2021
Messages
4
Push button circuit breakers do wear out. Blowers can also get corroded. A resistance check on the blower circuit can tell you what is wrong. Alternatively, you could replace the circuit breaker with a fuse, rated for the current draw of the blower and see if it blows.
Thanks for your input, how do you perform the resistance check?
 

Fed

Commander
Joined
Apr 1, 2010
Messages
2,457
Resistance within a circuit reduces current.
Check for short circuits in wiring and blower motor.
 

dallan1

Recruit
Joined
Feb 28, 2021
Messages
4
Push button circuit breakers do wear out. Blowers can also get corroded. A resistance check on the blower circuit can tell you what is wrong. Alternatively, you could replace the circuit breaker with a fuse, rated for the current draw of the blower and see if it blows.
Hello- I went to the boat this weekend and the blower is a Detmar 7-5-1R and says 12VDC 3.5amps, but also says 6amp fuse. I know the push button breaker is only 5amps, can I just replace that with a 6amp breaker or do you think there is still a short somewhere? Thanks.
 

Chris1956

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 25, 2004
Messages
28,073
There is no way to tell if there is a short in the circuit, blower or if the circuit breaker is bad. Presumably the blower worked for years with the 5 A circuit breaker. You should either measure the resistance of the circuit and solve for amperage, or replace the circuit breaker, whichever is easier. You would need a decent ohmmeter to read the resistance accurately.

Ohms law says that the blower circuit should have a resistance value of 3.43 ohms, for a 3.5A draw. A 2 ohm resistance value means the blower circuit is drawing 6A. A 6a draw probably means the circuit is shorted or the blower is shorted.
 
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