SteveH
Member
- 78
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- Location
- Connecticut
Hi!
I've been lurking for several months, and have finally decided to go with an MEP-003a as an emergency backup whole house generator. Though I've spent plenty of time building/rebuilding old cars and trucks and other machinery this is the first time I've tried a generator (or anything military), but that's the challenge! I've kept an portable old ETQ diesel running for the last couple of years through several major outages (16 days in total), so am sold on the advantages of diesel, but want something more permanent and more power - and with auto-start/transfer
The main reason for this is that I've got several aquariums that need power 24/7, and I'm often not here. I'm going to be adding autostart (that's not a problem - PLC's/SCADA are my day job); but I'm wondering what others have done re transfer switches/auto-shedding.
Ideally, I'd like to run the whole house (I've got 200 Amp Service); and use load shedding to keep it to code. Although I've got several high load devices (well pump, septic pump, electric range etc) I know we don't need them all at the same time, but it would be nice to have access to any of them during an outage. I was looking at the Gen-Tran Ovation , which seems perfect - that's a regular load center, but can shed up to six circuits when over current is detected. However, they seem to have discontinued the entire range.
Closest alternative I can find is the various Generac ATS switches, but these seem to switch based on frequency drop - I'm not sure if this would work with the MEP-003a (does the frequency drop when it's getting overloaded, and is this a 'safe' way to protect the genny?). Also, I can't work out how well the Generac units will interface with a PLC based autostart (they only refer to being compatible with Generac generators, and the info I can find online doesn't provide any real details of this - I'm concerned it's some kind of propriety link)
I realize this isn't a specific MEP question, but hope you guys can help out. The hours I've read reading everything here have already convinced me this is the way to go, and I'm looking forward to turning some wrenches!
-Steve
I've been lurking for several months, and have finally decided to go with an MEP-003a as an emergency backup whole house generator. Though I've spent plenty of time building/rebuilding old cars and trucks and other machinery this is the first time I've tried a generator (or anything military), but that's the challenge! I've kept an portable old ETQ diesel running for the last couple of years through several major outages (16 days in total), so am sold on the advantages of diesel, but want something more permanent and more power - and with auto-start/transfer
The main reason for this is that I've got several aquariums that need power 24/7, and I'm often not here. I'm going to be adding autostart (that's not a problem - PLC's/SCADA are my day job); but I'm wondering what others have done re transfer switches/auto-shedding.
Ideally, I'd like to run the whole house (I've got 200 Amp Service); and use load shedding to keep it to code. Although I've got several high load devices (well pump, septic pump, electric range etc) I know we don't need them all at the same time, but it would be nice to have access to any of them during an outage. I was looking at the Gen-Tran Ovation , which seems perfect - that's a regular load center, but can shed up to six circuits when over current is detected. However, they seem to have discontinued the entire range.
Closest alternative I can find is the various Generac ATS switches, but these seem to switch based on frequency drop - I'm not sure if this would work with the MEP-003a (does the frequency drop when it's getting overloaded, and is this a 'safe' way to protect the genny?). Also, I can't work out how well the Generac units will interface with a PLC based autostart (they only refer to being compatible with Generac generators, and the info I can find online doesn't provide any real details of this - I'm concerned it's some kind of propriety link)
I realize this isn't a specific MEP question, but hope you guys can help out. The hours I've read reading everything here have already convinced me this is the way to go, and I'm looking forward to turning some wrenches!
-Steve