So the other day, i spent a couple hours degreasing with brake parts cleaner the enclosure of years of dust, and the diesel i spilled at the bottom of the enclosure when i misapplied the fuel filter cartridge gasket when replacing it last week.
Good news. I put a load on the genset today. It is raining now, so i was in a rush to get it done before the rain came hard.
I buit a table from some scrap 2x4 and 2x8 wood, wired up a couple 2 gang recepticle boxes with 20 amp screw in edison type fuses, one for each leg, and plugged in two 1500 watt oil filled electric radiators, a 1200 watt electric ceramic heater, and a 560 watt 2 bulb halogen work light. At the highest point i had approximately 4800 watts of load on it. I didn't have anything else at home to add. I had to borrow all the heaters from my father who uses them in emergencies if a furnace dies in his apartment house for his tenants.
The percent load meter read approximately 73%. I ran it like this till the fuse popped on one leg. I noticed some moisture in the fuse so i blamed it on that. The load bank was in the shed all winter and i assume got some water in the fuse somehow. I went to the hardware store and bought fresh fuses, and replaced the one that popped. Reapplied the 4800 watt load and it ran beautifully. I only had the load on for another 15 min before it started to sprinkle and i began to worry about water and electricity mixing and gave up.
Regarding its droop, i could probably adjust its droop EVER so SLIGHTLY. At no load i had it at 62 hz. At 4800 watts, it was hovering JUUUUUST under 60hz. I think one turn on the governor linkage adjuster with a 5mm allen wrench will tighten that droop up nicely.
As can be seen in the pic under close to 75% rated current ( 4800 watts) , coolant temps sat at about 185-190 deg F, oil pressure sat at approx 50 psi, frequency at 59.9hz, and voltage at 240 where i placed it, and the exhaust was 99.5% clear with a barely noticable tint in color under load.
I seem to have a touch of some moisture in the fuel, coolant temp, and oil pressure guages as can be seen in the incuded picture. i noticed a plug in the back of these guages which i carefully removed on one of them. Can i remove these plugs to allow the guages to dry up?
This genset is a definate keeper. At this point, i'll wait till the ground freezes, pull the MEP-002A off its generator pad, and pull the 802 back on the pad, place the 002a on the m116a trailer and sell that as a package. Also, what should the battery meter read? I seem to have found ALL The videos on youtube i watch were the meter always seems to read at ZERO, between read and green. I'm wondering if its only important BEFORE i start the genset?
I'm happy to have a genset that is MUCH quieter than the 002a. But i will miss the SIMPLE, ROBUSTNESS of the 002a.
I plan to replace the coolant. I don't know its age and prefer to have confidence in knowing there is fresh coolant in the engine.
Thanks all.
lastly, i tried some math. Tell me if my math is correct, and if our % rated load meters are linear.
4800 watts/73% rated load = x/100
so on a linear scale, a 100% load would equal 6,575 watts. will these meters read 100% at approx 6,500 watts ? i assume IF the meter is linear then it should? Thanks