How Capacitors help Electric Motors, Phase Shift, PTC to put Capacitor In or Out of Circuit... Above my Pay Grade.
USUALLY... An RV has a Compressor Run Capacitor and a Fan Run Capacitor. Your wiring diagram shows those two in a Combined "can" and that's OK. You can replace with another Combined, or with two Individual capacitors, each of the correct value as printed on the Combined one. You just need a jumper between "HERM" or "COM" on the two. You can even use an Individual to replace one side of a Combined if the other half is still working. I'd only do that as a temporary fix, though.
You don't need an RV store to replace your capacitor, although PPL will probably have it. We have two appliance parts stores near home. Both will sell to DIY. Many will not, citing Safety, Legality, Licensing etc. I believe they're just trying to protect their commercial customers' business. Anyhow, the one that just opened closer to my home sells better capacitors at a lower price. Tech there pointed out that there's a durability spec, defining how many operating hours they're good for.
If all you have is that combined cap with a PTC across it, the compressor RUN capacitor is being taken OUT of circuit till it get hot. Then it allows the RUN cap to support the compressor, Time to getting hot is supposed to be the time it takes for the compressor to start. We had a central A/C in house which was set up that way. PTC failed and compressor wouldn't start. New PTC, and it ran again. I didn't understand the system, did not test or replace the Capacitor, it just worked.
Here's a Page which tries to explain that.
Above is odd to me, because a "Hard Start" or "Start Assist" kit consists of an additional capacitor (round, hard plastic, around 100-MFD as I mentioned above) PLUS a PTC or some other device like a Relay or Solid State unit to get the boost capacitor out of circuit. The kits connect right across the two Compressor RUN Capacitor terminals which are "C" and "H" in your diagram, right were the PTC shows now. Two popular brands of those are SUPCO (SPP6e recommended by our RV Tech Chris Bryant for RV rooftop A/C) and 5-2-1 (part CSR U1). SUPCO SPP6 uses a Capacitor and a PTC. SPP6e uses a capacitor too but drops PTC in favor of electronic sensing. 5-2-1 claims to have better electronic sensing.
Anyhow, there are A/C units with NO PTC, NO Hard Start, and they work too. Our present house A/C is like that. And,that's the part above my pay grade. It's not clear to me why...
Nothing
PTC Only
Second Capacitor AND PTC (or a fancier device)...
...ALL help with starting?!?!
It seems many if not most RV A/C units have some form of Start Assist. That makes sense since limited Amps are available and sometimes the Voltage is low. It also seems that some RB builders specify Start Assist when they know the coach will have a generator, such as a Class C. And their Trailers don't get Start Assist, the builder thinking they'll always be plugged into a 30A or 50A pedestal. Forgetting, of course, that many trailer owners want to run their A/C off a portable generator, and need Start Assist worse than anybody else.
Oh, well, cheap shot to replace Capacitor and/or PTC. I just haven't heard of a failure in one of those causing anything but compressor overheating or not starting.
If God's Your Co-Pilot Move Over, jd
2003 Jayco Escapade 31A on 2002 Ford E450 V10 4R100 218" WB