| Click to Post a New Message!
Page [ 1 ] |
|
|
I have the diesel engine but no generator
I am in the critical power industry. Call the local reps for Caterpillar, Onan/Cummins, Generac, Square D, Siemens, Russelectric. They sell the really big stuff but might know who to call. They are usually in the phone book, or available via the manufacturer's website. Call the closest motor rewind shop, they will know who to call, or more likely will have something. When hooking a generator up as back up power there are tons of codes, refer to a code book or manual. Most importantly, be able to isolate the utility feed, so you don't backfeed the entire grid or parallel it when it returns, or kill the guy sent out to repair you downed line. Be able to isolate the generator too. Pay close attention to grounding, this is very important, remeber, less than 1/100th of one amp is enought get a conversation with St Peter. Pay attention to where the exhast goes, so you don't wake up dead one morning becase the exhaust was blowing into an environmental intake for the house. Be aware of prevailing wind direction. Mother nature is on a first name basis with Mr. Murphy, if it is stationary, construct a weather shelter. Since you never have to repair a backup generator in good weather make sure stucture is enough not to compromise your safety and make repairs/refueling easier. When the power goes out... get a good flashlite, isolate the utility feed first, turn EVERTHING in the house off, connect the generator and get it running, begin placing load on the generator by turning the essentials on first starting with the largest electrical load and progressing to the smallest and least important. A heavily loaded generator will drop in output frequency, you would be suprised at how much of today's equipment will sh*t the bed if faced with as little as a 2Hz drop in frquency. Keep plenty of air and fuel filters handy. Bad fuel is a residential back-up generator's biggest enemy. If you don't expect to need the unit shut off the gas and drain the tank. Run/cycle the generator unloaded once a week 10-15 minutes, place load on the generator for the same time once a month in the bad weather season. I am not trying to scare you, I just want to help,and I hope this has helped. Get a good book on hooking up generators from the web, or look to one of the self reliance/ back country living magazines also available on the web for additional resources. They have all kinds of great services and ads for all kinds of rural folk.
|
|
Add Photo
Bookmarks: |
|
| |
|
Page [ 1 ] | Thread 27918 Filter by Poster: 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
|
()
Picture of the Day DennisCTB
Unanswered Questions
Active Subjects
Hot Topics
Featured Suppliers
|