hurst01
Member
- 76
- 1
- 8
- Location
- Jeffersonville, Indiana USA
OK, I will concede that. I also understand what you are saying about it being a hunk of junk. But it would still be an expensive glow plug even though it might be necessary at some point. You are much more experienced with these generators that I am. It looks as though there may come a time when the heads might have to be modified to accept another glow plug, hopefully that won't be anytime too soon, but who knows?
I have considered modifying the generator to accept another glow plug. I am a Journeyman Machinist and I have a few skills in this area. I have read a lot of concerns about an imbalance of the batteries with hooking up 12V circuit to just one battery. This would be more of a concern to me if it was a constant drain on that one battery. The glow plugs I have are for the civilian version of the Onan which operates on 12V. And yes, they are obsolete also but I have a bunch of them so that is the way I was thinking about going because they are a direct fit in the mechanical aspect.
The drain on the battery would be 15-20 seconds at start-up only because the glow plugs are rated for 11V, they heat very quickly on 12-13V. That small of a drain on one battery for such a short time would be miniscule at best. The thread size on the CH42 is 7/16-20 TPI. The thread size on the CH41 is also 7/16-20 TPI. I haven't done any research to see what other 24V glow plugs are on thread size. If there was one available with that thread size it would make it easier to adapt depending on the type of seat was in the head for the glow plug, whether conical seat or flat-bottom.
I believe these Gensets are far from being a 1000 pound clunk of junk as long as people put their minds together through discussion and ideas. There is too much knowledge on this forum to believe otherwise. I found a 24V-12V 20A reducer that could be put inline with no modifications to the existing wiring, is vibration resistant with heat sink for $25, but the added cost of $25 is prohibitive to some people. This would allow the use of a 12V glow plug and still be totally reversible should the CH42s ever be produced again.
I sold 68 CH42 glow plugs in the classifieds in 3 weeks so I know there is a need for the glow plugs, and I didn't try to screw everyone's eyes out on the price. I kept enough for my own Gensets and sold the rest. I bought a sizable quantity of what was supposed to be CH42s but turned out to be CH41s that fit the 12V version of Onan. I am just trying to figure out how others might use them since the CH42 are not so readily available. Glow plugs should last a long, long time on the correct voltage.
I started out with these Gensets, buying them and doing repairs for Disabled Vets that needed them for power outages. I repaired about 12 of them. Mine is the only one that the glow plug blew out on, flat burned the the complete spade connector off the end.
I have considered modifying the generator to accept another glow plug. I am a Journeyman Machinist and I have a few skills in this area. I have read a lot of concerns about an imbalance of the batteries with hooking up 12V circuit to just one battery. This would be more of a concern to me if it was a constant drain on that one battery. The glow plugs I have are for the civilian version of the Onan which operates on 12V. And yes, they are obsolete also but I have a bunch of them so that is the way I was thinking about going because they are a direct fit in the mechanical aspect.
The drain on the battery would be 15-20 seconds at start-up only because the glow plugs are rated for 11V, they heat very quickly on 12-13V. That small of a drain on one battery for such a short time would be miniscule at best. The thread size on the CH42 is 7/16-20 TPI. The thread size on the CH41 is also 7/16-20 TPI. I haven't done any research to see what other 24V glow plugs are on thread size. If there was one available with that thread size it would make it easier to adapt depending on the type of seat was in the head for the glow plug, whether conical seat or flat-bottom.
I believe these Gensets are far from being a 1000 pound clunk of junk as long as people put their minds together through discussion and ideas. There is too much knowledge on this forum to believe otherwise. I found a 24V-12V 20A reducer that could be put inline with no modifications to the existing wiring, is vibration resistant with heat sink for $25, but the added cost of $25 is prohibitive to some people. This would allow the use of a 12V glow plug and still be totally reversible should the CH42s ever be produced again.
I sold 68 CH42 glow plugs in the classifieds in 3 weeks so I know there is a need for the glow plugs, and I didn't try to screw everyone's eyes out on the price. I kept enough for my own Gensets and sold the rest. I bought a sizable quantity of what was supposed to be CH42s but turned out to be CH41s that fit the 12V version of Onan. I am just trying to figure out how others might use them since the CH42 are not so readily available. Glow plugs should last a long, long time on the correct voltage.
I started out with these Gensets, buying them and doing repairs for Disabled Vets that needed them for power outages. I repaired about 12 of them. Mine is the only one that the glow plug blew out on, flat burned the the complete spade connector off the end.