Saturday, Nov 02, 2019 at 00:10
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Yes Nick, I can see why there is 12v positive both sides of the relay coil.
One side is permanently connected to 12v pos and you will also read 12v on the other side of the coil as the meter is seeing the 12v pos via the coil.
The small yellow wire leaving the board (in the "back side" photo) is the control for the relay. When this wire is pulled down to earth (negative) current can flow through the coil and energise it to run the compressor. If you were to connect a temporary wire from earth to the point on the board where that yellow wire connects then the relay should pull-in and the compressor run.
If that does not happen then either the relay or the motor is faulty. If the relay is OK then you should hear it click as you touch the earth onto the yellow wire. If the relay does not pull-in then it is faulty and should be replaced.
If the relay pulls-in but the motor does not run then either the motor is faulty or the relay has a burned-out contact.
If the the relay pulls-in and the motor runs then you could consider doing away with the remote control and simply permanently connect the earth to the relay in lieu of the yellow wire. The compressor could then be controlled by its existing switch. Remove the yellow wire from the relay to avoid false signals to the relay.
Your question "Regards connecting the negative wire what would the standard way of connecting these main wires"........ I don't follow you here. What "main wires" are you referring to and where are you intending to "connect" them?
Comment: I like simple engineering so I endorse your proposal to eliminate the remote control and use a simple switch. The motor could be controlled directly by a switch without using relay however it would need to be a 60A switch which are bulky and not so easy to come by. So a small (10A?) switch can be used to control a 60A relay. Still fairly simple.
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