cuad4u
Active member
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- 28
- Location
- St Matthews, SC
I don't know if this is the proper place for this comment, but...............
As many of you know I bought a nice looking, clean but inoperative MEP 003A about two months ago from a GL. Before that date I honestly never even heard of any of the MEP generators. Over the past 6 weeks many of you helped me get it running and generating 100% by patiently answering the many questions I asked on this site.
I live in lower-mid SC and the once-in-a-century ice storm that passed through a couple of days age devastated this area. I live in the middle of a 700 acre farm and my private "driveway" is over a mile long. I am the only residence served by a mile long power line. We lost power at 9PM Tuesday night and as of 9AM Friday power is still off. Since I live in such an isolated area, it could be many more days before power is restored.
When I built the house 1998 I had the electrician install a 100A transfer switch mounted on the rear of the house with the prospect of having a "whole house" generator "one day". Sensing that this was going to be a bad ice storm on Monday afternoon, I pulled the trailer mounted MEP 003A near the transfer switch and connected 60 ft of #2 wire from the generator to the transfer switch.
When the power went out at 9PM Tuesday night the temperature was 23 degrees. Even though the MEP 003A started right up and has been running non-stop ever since - over 60 hours. I have a rather large house and the bottom floor is heated and cooled by a 5 ton Carrier heat pump with emergency electric resistance heat strips. I have not tried to run the 5 ton heat pump from the generator, but the MEP 003A runs everything else in the house, lights, 3HP well pump, water heater, stove, oven, dishwasher, washer, dryer, coffee pot, vacuum cleaner, etc.
Every morning and every evening it has become a joke that I have to go outside and "feed" the green monster. The green monster "eats" about 10 gallons of diesel fuel every 12 hours. Living on a farm with tractors, trucks, and backhoes, diesel fuel is one thing I won't run out of.
My wife does not like spending money, but she commented this morning. "I don't know what you paid for the green monster, but it was worth every penny".
As many of you know I bought a nice looking, clean but inoperative MEP 003A about two months ago from a GL. Before that date I honestly never even heard of any of the MEP generators. Over the past 6 weeks many of you helped me get it running and generating 100% by patiently answering the many questions I asked on this site.
I live in lower-mid SC and the once-in-a-century ice storm that passed through a couple of days age devastated this area. I live in the middle of a 700 acre farm and my private "driveway" is over a mile long. I am the only residence served by a mile long power line. We lost power at 9PM Tuesday night and as of 9AM Friday power is still off. Since I live in such an isolated area, it could be many more days before power is restored.
When I built the house 1998 I had the electrician install a 100A transfer switch mounted on the rear of the house with the prospect of having a "whole house" generator "one day". Sensing that this was going to be a bad ice storm on Monday afternoon, I pulled the trailer mounted MEP 003A near the transfer switch and connected 60 ft of #2 wire from the generator to the transfer switch.
When the power went out at 9PM Tuesday night the temperature was 23 degrees. Even though the MEP 003A started right up and has been running non-stop ever since - over 60 hours. I have a rather large house and the bottom floor is heated and cooled by a 5 ton Carrier heat pump with emergency electric resistance heat strips. I have not tried to run the 5 ton heat pump from the generator, but the MEP 003A runs everything else in the house, lights, 3HP well pump, water heater, stove, oven, dishwasher, washer, dryer, coffee pot, vacuum cleaner, etc.
Every morning and every evening it has become a joke that I have to go outside and "feed" the green monster. The green monster "eats" about 10 gallons of diesel fuel every 12 hours. Living on a farm with tractors, trucks, and backhoes, diesel fuel is one thing I won't run out of.
My wife does not like spending money, but she commented this morning. "I don't know what you paid for the green monster, but it was worth every penny".