I did get it running. One of the terminal strips uses 6-32 brass machine screws and because of time or vibration or corrosion or by mouse saliva, some of the heads popped off...I found one early on and yesterday while tracing the generator head wiring, I found two more...one of them being a field coil lead...fired it up, a few seconds later, the field built up and I had juice. I did a mini load test of a 4500 watt heating element...seemed to work fine. Definitely notice when the load is applied, more so than with my 002a.
Discovering more things every time I putz with the set:
Battery charging is done my the generator, not the engine.
In addition to the oil sump heaters (gas or electric) there are electric strip heaters and a basic control in the battery box.
Electric governor and electric choke.
No load side overcurrent protection as far as I can tell. Overspeed, overvoltage, overfrequency, and overtemp protection, but not overcurrent.
I think the auto start circuit starts the engine when utility power drop below a preset level, but frequency control is done with a knob, and the load contactor also has to be manually engaged. Don't know why it would start on it's own when someone has to be there to connect the load. The frequency knob has a "start/idle" setting which I think enables the electric choke...so if you leave it set for 60hz, it may be hard starting when cold.
I ordered a new muffler off of e-bay...ironically an exact replacement for $20.00 plus shipping and I need to dig into the oil and cylinder head temp gauges to see why they are not working...I also want to clean out debris (old mouse nests) and such before firing it up again. I also picked up oil, just to have piece of mind of an oil change. I'd also like to dig into where the set gets power for the heaters and see if battery charging can be done when the set is not running...I would kinda assume that heaters would run off of "plug-in" power and not the batteries.