Im gonna bring it to a local rewinding shop hoefully they
If he is going this route, I highly recommend taking the information off the actual caps and take down the dimensions. Manufacturers vary on sizes even with the same ratings. Space is usually an issue fitting these in place. Also, not sure what they do over there in Europe, but here, we go by NEMA for motor listings and you almost never see the cap information on the motor nameplate.Duaaa.. I looked at your first post and the tag pictures . On the right side you see that "UF" thing with the 189-227 ? That's your cap info
I don't see a 70 but these 65 should do ..
Not a electrical expert....lol.
"220 volt " ones
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=189-227 mfd capacitor 220vac&i=aps&ref=nb_sb_ss_ts-doa-p_4_21&crid=XNZP29RNYZWT&sprefix=189-227 mfd capacitor,aps,516
Though best to read the actual on the cap info in the unit being they can't send you the correct motor. ..lol
Now with that
https://www.hunker.com/12413597/how-to-tell-the-difference-between-110v-and-220v
I assume your not running on 110 instead of 220 and seeing these issues?
I gotta measure the voltage at my place. What voltage would be ideal?https://upgradedhome.com/110v-vs-120v/
Or
https://www.finnleyelectrical.com.au/is-220v-the-same-as-240v/
Of course if you rual area stone age grid as I am it's probably 90v
Anyway I assume your wired up at the plug for 220/240 running that..?
That depends on your motor .. normal household is 110/120 ( like your tv or toaster plugs in to .).I gotta measure the voltage at my place. What voltage would be ideal?