Zed254
Well-known member
- 866
- 466
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- Location
- S. Hampton Roads, VA
Lucky your unit had the quad fuse installed. I'm guessing a compressor or motor started and tripped your generator. This is why the military de-rates these units to 80%... ~41.6 amps or so...to allow for motors and such to cut on and off without shutting the generator down. Startup amps can be quite high for motors.
Using your home as a load bank can be risky: electronic items can get fried when a generator burps and you've seen how hard it is to control amps. I bought a used electric stove to test with which is a 100% resistive load (no motor starts). A lot of the guys on SS have built their own load banks: they are a lot smaller and easier to handle than my stove. Some have bought electric garage heaters.
I've gotten to the point that I run my generators at around 95% - on a stove - for 2 or 3 hours each quarter. I warm them up with light loads, go into a heavier load, then back off on load as I approach shutdown.
Using your home as a load bank can be risky: electronic items can get fried when a generator burps and you've seen how hard it is to control amps. I bought a used electric stove to test with which is a 100% resistive load (no motor starts). A lot of the guys on SS have built their own load banks: they are a lot smaller and easier to handle than my stove. Some have bought electric garage heaters.
I've gotten to the point that I run my generators at around 95% - on a stove - for 2 or 3 hours each quarter. I warm them up with light loads, go into a heavier load, then back off on load as I approach shutdown.