Going to go look at 4 MEP-802A gensets tomorrow morning and hopefully leave with 2 or 3 of them.
I plan to use 1 or 2 as backup generators for my house. I have 400A service into 2 200A panels. I just went and put a current meter on each of the 2 hot legs in each panel and got the following readings:
Panel A L1 20.8A
Panel A L2 13.6A
Panel B L1 7.9A
Panel B L2 5.0A
I have a very efficient 4 ton 2 stage heat pump (Trane XL20i) which was running in the 2nd stage. It was drawing 11.3A.
I had everything on that I normally would, computers, TV, lights, so I could probably be a little more frugal if needed. My water heater is gas, as it my stove, but I do have a well pump which was not running when taking the above readings.
So my plan is to connect a 802A to each panel and have all the critical circuits, including A/C in Panel A and have that be the primary and only fire up the 2nd 802A when I need to use other stuff in panel B and probably rotate the generators each year so they accumulate hours at a similar rate.
What is the max real-life actual amp draw the 802A will handle? From reading other threads here, I understand that the 802A maxes out around 5500W where the 002A would get closer to 7 or 8KW before running out of steam.
My original plan was to run them in parallel after watching that YouTube video of the guy doing it with a pair of 002's, but then I read the thread here about it not being recommend. Who knows, if I feel brave enough, maybe I'll attempt it one day!
Thanks. I'm sure I'll have a ton of questions when I start working on the units, assuming I pick them up! They are all 2007-2009 models with between 1200 and 3500 hours on them. Price per unit range from $450 to $1000. All are supposedly complete except 2 of them are missing a cover or two.
I plan to use 1 or 2 as backup generators for my house. I have 400A service into 2 200A panels. I just went and put a current meter on each of the 2 hot legs in each panel and got the following readings:
Panel A L1 20.8A
Panel A L2 13.6A
Panel B L1 7.9A
Panel B L2 5.0A
I have a very efficient 4 ton 2 stage heat pump (Trane XL20i) which was running in the 2nd stage. It was drawing 11.3A.
I had everything on that I normally would, computers, TV, lights, so I could probably be a little more frugal if needed. My water heater is gas, as it my stove, but I do have a well pump which was not running when taking the above readings.
So my plan is to connect a 802A to each panel and have all the critical circuits, including A/C in Panel A and have that be the primary and only fire up the 2nd 802A when I need to use other stuff in panel B and probably rotate the generators each year so they accumulate hours at a similar rate.
What is the max real-life actual amp draw the 802A will handle? From reading other threads here, I understand that the 802A maxes out around 5500W where the 002A would get closer to 7 or 8KW before running out of steam.
My original plan was to run them in parallel after watching that YouTube video of the guy doing it with a pair of 002's, but then I read the thread here about it not being recommend. Who knows, if I feel brave enough, maybe I'll attempt it one day!
Thanks. I'm sure I'll have a ton of questions when I start working on the units, assuming I pick them up! They are all 2007-2009 models with between 1200 and 3500 hours on them. Price per unit range from $450 to $1000. All are supposedly complete except 2 of them are missing a cover or two.
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