tvidnoviciii wrote:Dusty,
The capacitor should shut off the current in the circuit once it gets to a full charge, so there must be something that is discharging (the start winding) the capacitor in order for the circuit to continue to operate.
I don't follow the logic.
It is not the capacitor being fully charged that terminates the flow of current through the start windings. It is the action of the start switch. The start switch begins closed. It is through that "closed" circuit that the start current flows and the motor begins rotation. When the motor reaches some speed (run speed), the centrifugal switch opens. Opening that switch is what "stops" the start current. The motor is now at run speed, the switch is open and the capacitor simply holds its charge. There is no completed circuit attached to the capacitor.
Now if the start switch "never" really disconnects, there would be a constant charge current even if the motor is at run speed. If that should happen, I don't know what would happen to the capacitor.
You reported that when you heard the pop and saw the smoke, you removed power. If you had not removed power, would the motor have continued to rotate. The capacitor is, at that point, no longer and there certainly would be no run current.