jlxb
New member
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- aitkin, mn
Hi, I am not an electrician but I see some things in the photos that may be significant.
1) In the photo I see that L1 +L2 is reading 208 volts. That would be correct if the genset was still set up (wired internally) as a 3 phase generator. That means that L1,L2 and L3 are all hot with 120 volts each
2) At the connection studs, your electrician has a white wire connected to L1 - Red and Black are connected to L2 and L3 respectively. Three hot wires are never used to supply single phase power.
Conclusions:
A) Your generator is NOT set up for single phase
B) The White wire is supposed to be neutral in a single phase scenario and L1 is NOT neutral. This is very dangerous! That white wire goes to neutral in your main box in the house but the electrician has120 volts going into neutral. Put a hand held meter on it to verify.
C) The electronic contactor will not stay engaged because it detects the fault condition - the fault is an over voltage (208 volts instead of 120 L to neutral) on the outside of the contactor.
To remedy this follow these steps:
1) Take the green wire off the ground stud and attach it to the earth ground stud on the outside frame of the generator
2) Take the white wire off the L1 stud and attach it to the L0 stud one position to the left. It is now neutral.
3) You can leave the red and black where they are or move them both over to the left, it does not matter.
4) Make sure you have the genset well grounded to earth with a grounding rod.
In this configuration, you are pulling single phase off of two legs of the three phase generator. You will only get 2/3 of the generator this way but that is OK. You have 10Kw available.
1) In the photo I see that L1 +L2 is reading 208 volts. That would be correct if the genset was still set up (wired internally) as a 3 phase generator. That means that L1,L2 and L3 are all hot with 120 volts each
2) At the connection studs, your electrician has a white wire connected to L1 - Red and Black are connected to L2 and L3 respectively. Three hot wires are never used to supply single phase power.
Conclusions:
A) Your generator is NOT set up for single phase
B) The White wire is supposed to be neutral in a single phase scenario and L1 is NOT neutral. This is very dangerous! That white wire goes to neutral in your main box in the house but the electrician has120 volts going into neutral. Put a hand held meter on it to verify.
C) The electronic contactor will not stay engaged because it detects the fault condition - the fault is an over voltage (208 volts instead of 120 L to neutral) on the outside of the contactor.
To remedy this follow these steps:
1) Take the green wire off the ground stud and attach it to the earth ground stud on the outside frame of the generator
2) Take the white wire off the L1 stud and attach it to the L0 stud one position to the left. It is now neutral.
3) You can leave the red and black where they are or move them both over to the left, it does not matter.
4) Make sure you have the genset well grounded to earth with a grounding rod.
In this configuration, you are pulling single phase off of two legs of the three phase generator. You will only get 2/3 of the generator this way but that is OK. You have 10Kw available.