juddspaintballs
Member
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- 18
- Location
- Berkeley Springs, WV
I currently have no electricity in the house and with the spotty Internet I can get from my cell phone (that I didn't charge last night...), I don't have the ability to download a manual or large files. I need electricity to get my heat up and running right now and I'll need water when the kids get home from school.
I have a MEP-003a that I bought many years ago from Gov Liquidation. It was marked as "Unserviceable/Unrepairable" and the reason was "No Oil." I put filters, oil, fuel, and batteries in it and it fired right up and worked as designed. I've powered my house and my parents' house with it many times. It ran my parents' whole house after Sandy for 4 days straight. At my new house out in the sticks here, I've only had to use the generator rarely. When not in use, it sits under cover in a run-in shed I have.
I pulled it out today with the tractor, hooked up the batteries, and gave it a crank after a 1 minute pre-heat. It fired up after a few seconds of cranking and hummed along just fine. When I checked voltage, I had 0.474vAC at the convenience plug on the panel. I have that same voltage across the L1 and L0 lug and the L3 and L0 lug. Across L1 and L3, I have .759vAC. I have the selector switch set to 120/240v. At the convenience plug, I used my Fluke to read frequency and I am at 60Hz give or take a little fluctuation. I've worked the breaker back and forth several times and it's in the ON position now. The gauges on the panel all read to the far left.
So I really don't know much about the generator's intricacies. I bought it, filled it up, and ran it. It's always worked great for me. I found something about "flashing the field" but I don't quite understand how to do that. The best I could tell from browsing through threads was that I turn the switch to "start" while it's running and that should do it. I tried that and it makes an awful noise like the starter is spinning while it's running, which I don't believe it should be doing. While I do that, the voltage at the convenience plug reads ~91vAC on the Fluke, the volt meter on the panel reads about 180vAC, and the frequency gauge on the panel is pegged at 65 Hz. When I release the start switch, the frequency drops back to the far left again, voltage on the gauge drops to the far left again, and the Fluke reads .483vAC again.
Any help here? Again, my house is currently not being heated and I have no power. I haven't tried or tested anything other than what I've described above. I don't know how to do anything else or what to do, but if you tell me, I can follow directions.
I have a MEP-003a that I bought many years ago from Gov Liquidation. It was marked as "Unserviceable/Unrepairable" and the reason was "No Oil." I put filters, oil, fuel, and batteries in it and it fired right up and worked as designed. I've powered my house and my parents' house with it many times. It ran my parents' whole house after Sandy for 4 days straight. At my new house out in the sticks here, I've only had to use the generator rarely. When not in use, it sits under cover in a run-in shed I have.
I pulled it out today with the tractor, hooked up the batteries, and gave it a crank after a 1 minute pre-heat. It fired up after a few seconds of cranking and hummed along just fine. When I checked voltage, I had 0.474vAC at the convenience plug on the panel. I have that same voltage across the L1 and L0 lug and the L3 and L0 lug. Across L1 and L3, I have .759vAC. I have the selector switch set to 120/240v. At the convenience plug, I used my Fluke to read frequency and I am at 60Hz give or take a little fluctuation. I've worked the breaker back and forth several times and it's in the ON position now. The gauges on the panel all read to the far left.
So I really don't know much about the generator's intricacies. I bought it, filled it up, and ran it. It's always worked great for me. I found something about "flashing the field" but I don't quite understand how to do that. The best I could tell from browsing through threads was that I turn the switch to "start" while it's running and that should do it. I tried that and it makes an awful noise like the starter is spinning while it's running, which I don't believe it should be doing. While I do that, the voltage at the convenience plug reads ~91vAC on the Fluke, the volt meter on the panel reads about 180vAC, and the frequency gauge on the panel is pegged at 65 Hz. When I release the start switch, the frequency drops back to the far left again, voltage on the gauge drops to the far left again, and the Fluke reads .483vAC again.
Any help here? Again, my house is currently not being heated and I have no power. I haven't tried or tested anything other than what I've described above. I don't know how to do anything else or what to do, but if you tell me, I can follow directions.
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