buzzp-- I acknowledge that there are newer, more sophisticated protective devices for plant-floor motors and even refrigeration systems, but my comments are based on the "installed base" and smaller, generally more numerous sizes (e.g., ‘35 hp’) and quantities of refrigeration equipment.
e-pete— Semi-hermetic and hermetic refrigeration compressors are, on average, made with less iron than T-frame motors. Although there are some newer chillers that have more advanced protection, there are a great number in service that have fairly unsophisticated compressor protection, and low thermal mass; so a fair portion of hermetic stators now in service have reduced headroom to survive mechanical overloading and electrical unbalance/undervoltage problems. They rely on specific saturated-vapor refrigerant flows for heat dissipation. Stator thermal failures are pricey, for a couple of reasons. Field repairs are rarely possible short of replacement of the entire motor-compressor assembly, and have a fairly high price tag on the replacement new or rebuilt compressor compared to an equally sized T-frame motor. More so than conventional motors, they are somewhat sole sourced, so may be less competitively priced than NEMA-standard motors. Preventive measures like insulation-resistance tracking are rare, and in newer chiller systems, correct operation of electrical protective/display devices are sometimes misunderstood and overridden.
There are many sizes and brands of semi-hermetic and hermetic refrigeration compressors, so interchangeability is less likely than with conventional motors, with the ready willingness to pay premium interstate shipping fees {and in-house maintenance crew or repair-contractor overtime} to limit the duration of fellow-employee {and hotshot junior vice-president} complaints. The rigging necessary to change many hermetic units is often improvised and only marginally safe, given some of the places they are shoehorned in to. Also, burnt enamel is free to chemically contaminate the refrigerant circuit, requiring some longer term babysitting after compressor replacement and consequently larger repair invoices.
There is a tendency to let them sit in the corner, and not be looked at until there a number of ‘filtered’ complaints—but that is not unique to mechanical refrigeration.
These statements have been empirical and somewhat anecdotal, but also of first-hand observation.