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Well, here it is 0300 on a Thrusday morning and I'm sitting at work kinda bored. In the morning when I finish up for the weekend I am heading over to Kipman's place to meet up with Him, Gimpyrobb and maybe Oilcan to have a little wrench rally.
Last summer Gimp got a really, really good deal on a MEP-112 generator (the 400 Hz one) with the ask enclosure. The question has been brought up so many times I don't even want to discuss it...what can you use a 400 Hz generator for? We all should know the answer by now. It's also been posed to the group...what would you need to convert (or how would you convert) a 400 Hz generator to a 60 Hz unit. That's what we are planning to do over the course of the day tomorrow and possibly Friday morning if necessary. To the best of my knowledge this will be the first time any steelsoldier has ever attempted this.
The biggest things needed to do the change over is the generator head and associated electrical components, since the DC side and engines are the same animal. Through some wheeling and dealing, Chris procured my spare 10 Kw 60 Hz generator head and one of my spare 60 Hz 10 Kw AC output boxes. Last summer we (Chris, Kip, Joe and Myself) also won a lot of control boxes from GL. Upon inspection, what was supposed to be 8 boxes turned out to be 10. With a little testing and parts swapping, Kip and I were able to come up with 8 complete and working control boxes and a few spare parts left over. So that control box makes up the 3 major components needed to cange a 400 Hz MEP-112a generator over to a 60 Hz MEP-003a.
The plan is to start by removing the ask and while the generator is still complete, we're going to re-set the governor down the the ranges specified in the TM for the 60 Hz machines. I want to do it first while the 400 Hz stuff is attached, that way if anything is going to burn up from it spinning too fast or not fast enough, it's going to be the 400 Hz stuff that is pretty much worthless anyway. Then we'll pull off the output box and control box, air cleaner assembly and framework on the "front" of the set to pull the head. Hopefully this swap won't take more than a few hours since everything on these sets is pretty much modular and just plugs in.
I've got my tools and various meters loaded in the truck and waiting for me in the morning. I'm taking my nice non contact tachometer along to make the re-set of the governor a lot easier. Since we all know how un-reliable and inaccurate the frequency gauges on these beasts are, the tach will make that part of the job much easier to accomplish.
I'll see if Chris or Kip have a camera and hopefully we can get a lot of pictures for you generator junkies out there. I would like to document this pretty thoroughly so we can have the best military generator discussion group on the web! If we're not already the best, I plan on helping to make us the best!!!!!!
More to follow.
Last summer Gimp got a really, really good deal on a MEP-112 generator (the 400 Hz one) with the ask enclosure. The question has been brought up so many times I don't even want to discuss it...what can you use a 400 Hz generator for? We all should know the answer by now. It's also been posed to the group...what would you need to convert (or how would you convert) a 400 Hz generator to a 60 Hz unit. That's what we are planning to do over the course of the day tomorrow and possibly Friday morning if necessary. To the best of my knowledge this will be the first time any steelsoldier has ever attempted this.
The biggest things needed to do the change over is the generator head and associated electrical components, since the DC side and engines are the same animal. Through some wheeling and dealing, Chris procured my spare 10 Kw 60 Hz generator head and one of my spare 60 Hz 10 Kw AC output boxes. Last summer we (Chris, Kip, Joe and Myself) also won a lot of control boxes from GL. Upon inspection, what was supposed to be 8 boxes turned out to be 10. With a little testing and parts swapping, Kip and I were able to come up with 8 complete and working control boxes and a few spare parts left over. So that control box makes up the 3 major components needed to cange a 400 Hz MEP-112a generator over to a 60 Hz MEP-003a.
The plan is to start by removing the ask and while the generator is still complete, we're going to re-set the governor down the the ranges specified in the TM for the 60 Hz machines. I want to do it first while the 400 Hz stuff is attached, that way if anything is going to burn up from it spinning too fast or not fast enough, it's going to be the 400 Hz stuff that is pretty much worthless anyway. Then we'll pull off the output box and control box, air cleaner assembly and framework on the "front" of the set to pull the head. Hopefully this swap won't take more than a few hours since everything on these sets is pretty much modular and just plugs in.
I've got my tools and various meters loaded in the truck and waiting for me in the morning. I'm taking my nice non contact tachometer along to make the re-set of the governor a lot easier. Since we all know how un-reliable and inaccurate the frequency gauges on these beasts are, the tach will make that part of the job much easier to accomplish.
I'll see if Chris or Kip have a camera and hopefully we can get a lot of pictures for you generator junkies out there. I would like to document this pretty thoroughly so we can have the best military generator discussion group on the web! If we're not already the best, I plan on helping to make us the best!!!!!!
More to follow.
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