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If a coolant hose had a no squashing spring in it when new then it MUST be in there forever.
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Open to see comments.I appears that I post about every 6 months or so, after I have been to my place in the islands and had to fight with the generator. This time is no different.
Finally got back to the islands over the past weekend. Ran the generator for a bit without a load and put in some radiator flush. After about 2 hours of running without a load, I drained and flushed the radiator getting a lot of black liquid out. I then filled the radiator back up and started it up with a load. After running about 10 minutes with a load of 18.6 amps on line 1 and 19.4 amps in line 3, the generator over heated and shut down. (Did you run the gen set at this high a load before you started this whole rodeo, and it ran without over heating?) Thankfully we had "normal power" with no issued on this trip and didn't have to rely on the generator.
Here is what I found while checking things -
1. half of radiator fan shroud is missing (What part of the fan shroud, and have you replaced it?) (but it has been missing since I bought it and I have not had these issues in the past really.)
2. Both of the radiator hoses feel "crunchy" when I squeeze them. They are not soft and pliable.
3. fan spins with the water pump and no damage to the fins.
confirming there is not an internal impeller in the water pump?
Followed the following from the manual -
1. amps don't appear to be more than capacity
2. coolant level is full
3. pretty sure oil level is good but I didn't think to check it
4. didn't check the air intake
5. fan belt is tight
Any suggestions? We hope to be back at the end of December.
Yes to all. I just put a new water pump on it this week. Now I have a new issue - the unit bogs down under load and dies. No warning lights or anything. Prime pump still ticking away... I replaced the fuel filters recently (when I had the over heat issue) and now wonder if I also have a clogged injector.Open to see comments.
I think you are 100% correct here. Yesterday I tried an experiment.... Remember, I am working on an island so I have limited resources.Although your fuel pump is clicking away, your description is a classic sign of a failing fuel pump. Just because they make noise doesn't mean they are good. It just happened to me ( again ) recently. Machine was running great one day, next day my buyer arrived and the machine would bog at anything over 30% load.
Turned out the primary pump was going bad. Swapped it out and machine ran like a champ and the buyer took the machine home with no further problems.
Those machines need a bit of pressure for the metering pumps to operate. Having "fuel" at the metering pumps is not enough, you need 5+ PSI just to keep it running, more when under load.
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