Replacement motor starters for industrial trash compactors — NEMA and IEC formats, complete with overload protection and auxiliary contacts. Plus transformer fuses for control circuits. Drop-in replacements for Marathon, PTR, Wastequip, Harmony, and SP Industries.
The motor starter is the electrical component that energizes the compactor's motor on demand from the control system. It's a heavy-duty contactor (often with integrated overload protection) rated for the inrush current of starting a 5-25HP motor. When a starter's contacts pit, weld closed, or burn out, the motor either stops working entirely or fails unsafely.
PRT stocks motor starters in both NEMA (the North American industrial standard) and IEC (the European industrial standard adopted on many modern North American compactors). Most older compactors use NEMA; most post-2010 industrial equipment uses IEC. Transformer fuses (which protect the control circuit's step-down transformer) are also stocked here.
Match the starter by NEMA or IEC format (look at the existing starter — they're visually distinct), motor horsepower and voltage (size 1, 2, 3, 4 for NEMA; current rating for IEC), and coil voltage (usually 120V AC for the contactor's control coil).
If you're rebuilding a compactor control panel, standardizing on one format (NEMA or IEC) simplifies spare parts inventory. Most operators stay with the format their original equipment uses.
NEMA starters are sized by category (size 1, 2, 3, 4 — bigger size = higher HP rating). IEC starters are sized by current rating. NEMA is the historical North American standard; IEC is the modern global standard. Functionally equivalent for compactor service; not physically interchangeable.
Size 1 for 5HP at 240V or 7.5HP at 480V. Size 2 for 10HP at 240V or 25HP at 480V. Size 3 for 25HP at 240V. The starter's HP/voltage rating chart will tell you exactly which size.
Functionally yes, but it's a rewiring job — the terminal layout, mounting pattern, and overload relay format are different. Most operators replace like-for-like to avoid the rebuild work.
Contact pitting is gradual — most starters last 5-10 years in standard commercial service. Sudden failure (welded contacts, burned coil) usually traces to a separate problem (motor overload, low control voltage, repeated short cycling).