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Compressor Excessive Run at High Altitude
#1

Have just spent 10 days in the Rockies above 7000 feet.
The 110v compressors ran excessively hard while there. I had to manually turn on the compressors and then turn them off to avoid an "excessive run" situation.
I know the compressors lose about 20% of their effectiveness above 5000 feet.
Does anyone have a better solution? I'm told by Newell that I can not adjust the "on" "off" PSI of the compressor.
Any suggestions? Am now in Kansas and all seems to be back to normal.
Richard

Richard & Marla
2017 Newell
Coach 1608
4 slides
45' 8"
Cummins 600 Allison transmission 6 speed
F150 Toad
Porsche C4S cabriolet
F350
Cadillac Escalade
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#2

i had our 02 at our cabin this spring for 2 weeks and it is at 7000 feet. i had no issues with my 120v compressor. ran normally.

as for adjusting on off of the compressor psi, all it is is a common square d well pump switch. i dont think they make many of them you cannot adjust. you can take the gray box cover off (after the power is turned off for the compressor) and if there is one screw with a nut on it, that is the one you can adjust the cut in psi. they mostly have a 20psi differential so if you adjust it up or down the differential of 20psi remains the same. if there are two adjustment nuts, the smaller one adjusts the differential.

i would more wonder if the lower temps at altitude are exaggerating any air leaks you might have. or were you using more air for any reason?



although, i am not sure why you would want to adjust the pressure.

tom

2002 45'8" Newell Coach 608  Series 60 DDEC4/Allison World 6 Speed HD4000MH

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#3

Tom,

When I looked at Richards compressor setup, it looks like the compressors are now controlled by the Valid system. I did not see the classic well pump switch.

My best guess is that the compressors may be showing some early signs of wear, and that the lower barometric pressure at altitude puts the upper cutoff pressure at the limit of their capability. Richard, if this were the case then the compressors would have gotten to some number below their upper set point and just held that pressure while they ran and ran. Is that what happened?

If it were an exacerbated air leak, then the compressors would have cycled more frequently, but would reach the cutoff point and stopped.

Richard and Rhonda Entrekin
99 Newell, 512
Maverick Hybrid Toad
Inverness, FL (when we're home Cool )
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#4

so there are two 120v compressors in the valid setup?

tom

2002 45'8" Newell Coach 608  Series 60 DDEC4/Allison World 6 Speed HD4000MH

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#5

In mine there are two identical 120V compressors, manually switchable. There is no 12V compressor.

The compressor controller doesn't have anything to do with Valid. It does seem set to maintain a higher range of PSI than the ones a lot of you guys with older coaches mention. There was no obvious user-friendly way to change the pressure settings on mine, although I didn't try disassembling the box to look inside. (As someone mentioned, not sure why we'd want to do that.)

If it matters, I had BOTH compressors die almost simultaneously after six months at 6,000 feet. They were both 10 years old and had ~2,500 hours on each. The new compressors did not seem to have any trouble compressing at that altitude relative to sea level. I have been watching the timing pretty closely, because (a) I replumbed them with polyethylene tubing and that was a disaster, and also (b) I have had a ton of leaks develop.

2008 Newell #1234
Boulder, CO

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