High load starters are Cap start, (different) cap for run cap. Split phase (light duty) no cap. Regular duty, run cap only. The run cap is to keep the power factor ELI the ICE man (E is field intensity now known as Voltage) within power company specs.
If the load is purely reactive [V (E) and I are 90 degrees out of phase, power factor = 0], no power is consumed and even though you are supplied Volts and Amperes, it doesn't add up to watts consumed.....heavy torque loaded motors are bad about this with no C compensation. Gotta have some R in the equation and to do that you have to add some C to balance the reactances. When the power factor is 1, the load looks like a resistor, and the power co gets paid 100% for kWhrs supplied at the meter. I think a PF of 0.85 is the acceptable lower limit which, besides transmission losses, they only get paid for 85% of what they send you. That's the way I remember it.
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