it’s for the electrician so I need a diagram or he will charge to get oneI don't have a diagram, but I've worked on them enough that if you tell me what you're trying to do I can probably tell you how to do it off the top of my head, and I have access to one to study if I need to.
Our carwash tech don’t deal with them anymore they where discontinuedYou need a car wash tech, not an electrician. The contactor is tripping to make you aware of a problem before something bad happens. Chances are low that the problem has anything at all to do with the control wiring which is what the diagram will provide. Maybe a weak connection on control wiring might cause the contactor to flutter, which could cause that, but most likely, you have a motor, contactor, or pump issue and the overload is just doing its job turning itself off before the fan starts stinkin.
1) Fire the electrician. If he's going to charge you to contact a manufacturer for a free wiring diagram because he can't troubleshoot a tripping overload he's both a crook and a moron.it’s for the electrician so I need a diagram or he will charge to get one
basically something keeps blowing the contact and he has never worked on one before
What? The only thing in that picture I see that is discontinued is the GS23 Hourmaster and we use a different brand of contactor/overload. We use a Class 2 transformer with built in circuit breaker now also. The timers are removed but I suspect the wash has been updated with display timers in the bay. The basic logic and control is still the same as we do today.Our carwash tech don’t deal with them anymore they where discontinued