Replacement electric motors for industrial trash compactors — single phase and three phase, from 5HP to 25HP. Direct drop-in for Marathon, PTR, Wastequip, Harmony, and SP Industries compactors. Motor accessories (mounting brackets, couplings, flanges) also in stock.
The motor is the muscle of the compactor — it drives the hydraulic pump that pressurizes the ram cylinder. When a motor fails or burns out, the compactor stops working entirely. PRT stocks OEM-spec replacement motors in the configurations used across the industry: single phase 5HP for vertical and small commercial compactors, three phase 5-25HP for stationary and self-contained applications.
Motor failures are usually predictable — bearing wear, winding insulation breakdown from age, thermal damage from overload, or starter contact damage that overstresses the windings. Most operators replace motors every 8-12 years in standard commercial service; abusive routes can shorten that to 4-6 years.
Identify the motor by horsepower (typically on the motor data plate), voltage and phase (single phase 110/220V or three phase 208/230/480V), frame size (NEMA frame number — 56, 143T, 145T, 182T, 184T are most common for compactors), and shaft style (foot-mount with belt drive, or close-coupled to the hydraulic pump).
If the motor data plate is unreadable, send PRT a photo of the motor and the existing pump assembly. We can usually identify the right replacement from the frame number stamped on the motor casting and the pump model.
The motor data plate lists horsepower, voltage, phase, and frame size. Match all four when ordering a replacement. If the plate is unreadable, the original power unit's spec sheet or PRT customer service can identify the right motor from the compactor model.
Yes. PRT motors use standard NEMA frame sizes (56, 143T, 145T, 182T, 184T) and OEM-equivalent electrical specs. They drop into Marathon, PTR, Wastequip, Harmony, and SP Industries compactor mounting locations.
8-12 years in standard commercial service. High-cycle industrial routes (food-service compactor receivers, multi-shift manufacturing) can shorten that to 4-6 years. Motor bearing wear is the most common end-of-life condition.
Yes, but the upgrade requires a new motor (windings are different), a new motor starter, and updated control wiring. Most operators upgrade the whole power unit rather than just the motor.