Discussion:
Blower Motor Wiring (colors)
(too old to reply)
c***@gmail.com
2015-04-25 09:39:23 UTC
Permalink
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
Black is High speed/Cooling speed and the Fan ON continuous speed.
a motor will work with either leg of power on common, on 230 v motors 2 hot legs are used, regardless the Common terminal and Run winding get the power.
The speeds if more than 1 are on the run winding usually, but some are on the start winding, if in doubt fuse it out, this way the worst that can happen is a blown fuse or the motor runs backwards.

Run and Start will be the 2 leads reading the highest to each other
Common is the point at which the Run winding and Start winding connect, it is not a common winding it is a common point where the 2 windings meet.
The speeds will be as described by the others earlier in that the lower resistance will be higher speeds.
claylove33@yahoo.com
2015-07-18 01:09:22 UTC
Permalink
I just brought a new blower motor 1/3hp 1075 rpm 115 volts but it don't have the same wiring as the old one here is a list of wires. brown wire, brown/white wire,black wire red wire blue wire white wire and two purple wire where do they go help please thanks a million ***@yahoo.com
m***@yahoo.com
2016-05-27 21:34:27 UTC
Permalink
I am converting an air conditioning fan to an attic fan to blow the heat out and I am trying to figure out the wiring for it. The fan has a black wire a blue wire and an orange wire. I also saved the capacitor which has three prongs with orange and yellow on one,blue on another and the last has a red. Can I bypass the capacitor and wire a switch thru the three wires out of the fan. I'm pretty sure the black is my load but am stumped on the rest.
Please help
Tony944
2016-05-27 22:47:32 UTC
Permalink
wrote in message news:66b14100-d171-4d92-8147-***@googlegroups.com...

I am converting an air conditioning fan to an attic fan to blow the heat out
and I am trying to figure out the wiring for it. The fan has a black wire a
blue wire and an orange wire. I also saved the capacitor which has three
prongs with orange and yellow on one,blue on another and the last has a red.
Can I bypass the capacitor and wire a switch thru the three wires out of the
fan. I'm pretty sure the black is my load but am stumped on the rest.
Please help

There is few possibility
One no you can not eliminate or bypass capacitor. Capacitor set direction of
the fan,
Without capacitor it will sit there and hum no moving, but you can started
by moving fan manually.
keep fingers clear you can try it without blade on the motor. it is usually
smaller part of capacitor
around 4 mfd. but under 10 Mfd. voltage should be equal to the supply or
higher.
I will try and guess Yellow is Common, Red goes to fan, Blue possible goes
to Compressor.
g***@gmail.com
2016-06-20 02:44:16 UTC
Permalink
Hi
I'm doing the same thing as using a HVAC for fan but the color of wires is black for high, green ground, orange not sure, red is for low, it also has brown and a capacitor I think that the has be connected to capacitor and back to the line whatever that means. Can you give some guidance with the wiring to use it as a blower only? Thanks

Dan
m***@gmail.com
2016-07-22 00:56:38 UTC
Permalink
I have a blower motor with two drum fans on it came from a microwave. The wire colors are black,white ,yellow,red and blue. Can someone tell me how to wire this.
PaxPerPoten
2016-07-22 03:03:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by m***@gmail.com
I have a blower motor with two drum fans on it came from a microwave. The wire colors are black,white ,yellow,red and blue. Can someone tell me how to wire this.
Fill it with R410A and it will be just fine.
--
"...I am committed against every thing which in my judgement, may
weaken, endanger, or destroy [The constitution]...and especially against
all extension of Executive power; and I am committed against any attempt
to rule the free people of this country by the power of the Government
itself... --Daniel Webster
m***@gmail.com
2016-07-22 00:56:40 UTC
Permalink
I have a blower motor with two drum fans on it came from a microwave. The wire colors are black,white ,yellow,red and blue. Can someone tell me how to wire this.
Bill
2016-07-22 05:14:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by m***@gmail.com
I have a blower motor with two drum fans on it came from a microwave. The wire colors are black,white ,yellow,red and blue. Can someone tell me how to wire this.
Maybe you can find some similar motors to get some clues. Try to ID it.
Careful, it just might be low voltage. Surely you have some control
wires there. Good luck!

Bill
f***@yahoo.com
2016-09-30 07:34:10 UTC
Permalink
I have a 220 blower motor. Can I run it on 110? If not how would I wire it for 220? It has 5 wires. Blue, Black, Red, Yellow, andOrange. Thanks, Tim
Tony944
2016-09-30 18:43:42 UTC
Permalink
Some 220AC motors can run on 110AC that have taps on, however it will run at
half the speed. (note some)

wrote in message news:7aeb3055-ef5e-4150-8044-***@googlegroups.com...

I have a 220 blower motor. Can I run it on 110? If not how would I wire it
for 220? It has 5 wires. Blue, Black, Red, Yellow, andOrange. Thanks, Tim


--- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: ***@netfront.net ---
e***@gmail.com
2017-03-07 20:06:08 UTC
Permalink
This is a blower Moyer off a air condition and it has black red and blue wires I want to put a plug on for a fan
Bill
2017-03-08 03:45:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by e***@gmail.com
This is a blower Moyer off a air condition and it has black red and blue wires I want to put a plug on for a fan
Sometimes there is a schematic on the side of the motor.
Tony944
2017-03-10 19:37:11 UTC
Permalink
I am not saying it is "but most likely" 220 Voltage. Black Common hot, Red
hot, Black & blue capacitor
Post by e***@gmail.com
This is a blower Moyer off a air condition and it has black red and blue
wires I want to put a plug on for a fan
Sometimes there is a schematic on the side of the motor.
j***@gmail.com
2017-04-27 05:37:43 UTC
Permalink
I have 4 wires to the capacitor. Red,yellow,blue and orange. What wire goes where
Bill
2017-04-27 06:45:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by j***@gmail.com
I have 4 wires to the capacitor. Red,yellow,blue and orange. What wire goes where
I've done a little work in this area, but I am not an expert. It sounds
"safer" to identify where those wires are coming to and from. People
reuse wire...and someone out of blue isn't going to run to the store.
You can probably find some photos on google.
By the way, if you have 4 wires to the capacitor, it is probably a
double (dual?) capacitor. Absolutely do not guess. Is there a
schematic drawing on the capacitor?
n***@gmail.com
2018-01-06 01:26:49 UTC
Permalink
I have a red/blue an a black wire witch one goes to the breaker an then a small purple wire comes off capacitor
j***@gmail.com
2018-03-18 02:41:11 UTC
Permalink
If I wanted to use motor/ blower how do I wire it to plug in to plug
g***@gmail.com
2017-09-07 15:24:57 UTC
Permalink
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
And in some cases Yellow is replaced by Orange as with the newer units.
a***@gmail.com
2018-05-11 11:02:38 UTC
Permalink
Thanks
Lance Klinger
2018-05-18 01:17:15 UTC
Permalink
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
j***@gmail.com
2018-06-04 14:13:14 UTC
Permalink
I found a small squirrel cage fan and was gonna try to hook it up and use it but I’m not sure what the wires are there is two black and one that is green and yellow
It is a 115 volts
b***@gmail.com
2018-06-20 06:07:25 UTC
Permalink
I bought a dayton 1/2hp universal blower fan that om wiring to a plug, ill be wiring it for 110v,the wiring diagram looks like it says white- line in, orange goes to nothing, and black and blue- line in. So does this mean i wire both black and blue to hot and white to white ? Its a dayton 1TDU2 btw. Thank for any help
t***@gmail.com
2018-06-28 19:57:25 UTC
Permalink
Small blower motor with yellow black an orange wire,need to know which is positive neagative an ground
Scott Lurndal
2018-06-28 20:20:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by t***@gmail.com
Small blower motor with yellow black an orange wire,need to know which is positive neagative an ground
What does the motor nameplate say? Did you google the motor manuf/part#?

It's not likely to have a positive, a negative or a ground;
rather it likely has common, high-speed, and low-speed conductors with a
frame ground.
w***@gmail.com
2018-06-29 17:09:26 UTC
Permalink
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
all i have is a orange black red black is in the high spot orange is in ml and red goes to capacitor then from their it is brown and orange going to inside motor hot do i make it go fast can i bypass capacitor or is ml the best i am going to get
Scott Lurndal
2018-06-29 17:23:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by w***@gmail.com
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
all i have is a orange black red black is in the high spot orange is in ml and red goes to capacitor then from their it is brown and orange going to inside motor hot do i make it go fast can i bypass capacitor or is ml the best i am going to get
If you expect that Turtle (whom you've responded to) has been monitoring
this group for the last 19 years waiting for your question, I suspect your
expectations are in vain.
Tekkie®
2018-06-29 20:35:54 UTC
Permalink
Scott Lurndal posted for all of us...
Post by Scott Lurndal
Post by w***@gmail.com
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
all i have is a orange black red black is in the high spot orange is in ml and red goes to capacitor then from their it is brown and orange going to inside motor hot do i make it go fast can i bypass capacitor or is ml the best i am going to get
If you expect that Turtle (whom you've responded to) has been monitoring
this group for the last 19 years waiting for your question, I suspect your
expectations are in vain.
They are. I believe Turtle passed away a looong time ago.
--
Tekkie
PaxPerPoten
2018-07-03 17:15:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Scott Lurndal
Post by w***@gmail.com
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
all i have is a orange black red black is in the high spot orange is in ml and red goes to capacitor then from their it is brown and orange going to inside motor hot do i make it go fast can i bypass capacitor or is ml the best i am going to get
If you expect that Turtle (whom you've responded to) has been monitoring
this group for the last 19 years waiting for your question, I suspect your
expectations are in vain.
Turtle died years ago.
--
It is hardly too strong to say that the Constitution was made to guard
the people against the dangers of good intentions. There are men in all
ages who mean to govern well, but *They mean to govern*. They promise to
be good masters, *but they mean to be masters*. Daniel Webster
t***@gmail.com
2018-07-14 18:09:25 UTC
Permalink
I just bought a new blower motor they are both 1/3hp 115v but the old one has black, white, yellow, red and blue, the new one only has black, red, yellow and blue. How do I wire this back up?
j***@gmail.com
2018-10-22 00:27:54 UTC
Permalink
Stick yellow wire up ur ass and stick finger in socket.
b***@gmail.com
2018-11-04 19:18:41 UTC
Permalink
I have a motor with 5 wires red yellow orange blue black. What are they for?
Scott Lurndal
2018-11-05 00:19:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by b***@gmail.com
I have a motor with 5 wires red yellow orange blue black. What are they for?
They make the motor turn.
tRudy Crayola
2018-11-05 05:01:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by b***@gmail.com
I have a motor with 5 wires red yellow orange blue black. What are they for?
To make a real pretty braided belt?
--
Rudy's Nut & Fruit farm- Sacramento
b***@gmail.com
2019-04-06 18:30:04 UTC
Permalink
I have a wiring diagram for mine.

Neutral is white,
Blue is high,
Black is medium.
red is low, and
yellow is "medium low."

I have two brown to a capacitor.

My concern is the ground. The cage I have has a green wire from the outer motor housing to the frame of the cage. Should I use a two prong plug (white and black) and assume it's grounded, or run an additional wire from the housing to a third, ground, prong on the plug?
y***@gmail.com
2019-06-14 03:01:14 UTC
Permalink
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
HI HOW ARE I HAVE A QUESTION CONCERNING A HVAC INDOOR AIR HANDLER THE OLD MOTOR HAD DIFFERENT COLOR WIRES THAN THE NEW HOW DO I FIND OUT HOW I CAN MAKE THEM WORK THANKJS
j***@gmail.com
2020-06-27 19:23:58 UTC
Permalink
Goodman heat pump black red blue wires coming out of unit to blower and new blower motor has red black blue jellow blue two brown wires can any one help
l***@gmail.com
2020-08-18 23:16:07 UTC
Permalink
I have a fan motor I have yellow white red two blues grey my power cord has black white and red how do I hook this fan up
JULIUS P HILARIO
2022-12-20 21:05:20 UTC
Permalink
I have a furnace blower that I plan to use just as a high powered fan. It's
a rather small squirrel cage direct drive blower.
I am assuming that the black wire is hot, and the white wire is common. And
then there are three colored wires that I'm assuming are LO, MED, HI
jumpers, but I don't know what they are to be attached to?
I have a Red, a Blue, and an Orange wire. Suppose that the red is HI and the
blue is MED and the orange is LO (just as an example)....does that mean that
the color of my choice needs to be contacting the ground/common or the hot?
I don't understand the theory behind these wires.
Also, there is a capacitor with two terminals on it mounted on this unit.
Both terminals have a brown wire that goes directly into the motor.
The ends of all these wires, including the black and white have just been
cut off blunt, and of course there is no wiring diagram attached to the
blower.
My main question is not to determine which color is which speed, I can
figure that part out on my own *if* I knew to what that wire was to be
attached? Common/Hot?
Thanks
Bill
this is turtle.
white ----- common
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
red ------ low speed
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
TURTLE
--
Posted via Talkway - http://www.talkway.com
Exchange ideas on practically anything (tm).
hi guys let me share something do not look up to color code of the wire to identify which one are common , for capacitor and which are for speed. these coming december 22, friday 11:a.m saudi time
i will do live video tutorial how identify which wire you all looking for about the motor blower without color code
find me at face face name Baba Voss , or contact me i will share it for free , +966548329070
;:
Heather Garcia
2023-06-15 23:25:55 UTC
Permalink
this is turtle.
white ----- common
Always hooked to neutral.
black ---- high speed
blue ---- medium high speed
orange --- medium speed
From my experience, when both red and orange, the orange is the low
speed.
red ------ low speed
Med-low on this motor probabally
in some cases yellow can be common in the place of white. you don't
have yellow but just a note.
If the common is yellow, then generally the motor is a 240 volt motor.
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
mY NAME IS HEAATHER I HAVE A 2007 CHEVY 1500 MY BLOWER MOTOR RESISTER WENT OUT I GOT ANOTHER ONE BUT THE WIRES CAME BLAVK AND WHITE . THE GUY THAT WAS SUPPOSE TO FIX IT TOOK IT APART AND NEVERCAME BACK CAN YOU PLZ TELL ME WHAT COLORED COLORS GO TO WHITE THEN BLSCK PLZ. I WOULD REALLY APPRECIATE IT...

MY EMAIL IS ***@gmail.com

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