flydude92
Member
- 117
- 9
- 18
- Location
- Waterville, Ohio
I purchased a working MEP-005A in August 2012 and put about 10 additional hours on it.
It has worked very well until now.
Every month I run it for about an hour to make sure everything works. On 2/1/13 it ran for about 10
seconds with proper voltage and frequency when the over voltage light went on. The voltage meter
jumped to about 160 volts and the generator didn’t shut down as expected.
I shut it down, checked connections and anything else I could come up with and restarted it.
It immediately went to an overvoltage condition and kept running.
I went inside (it was 25 degrees out & windy) and read thru the TM’s looking for anything to check out.
About an hour later I started it again and it ran about 10 seconds with proper voltage and frequency and
then the overvoltage light came on. The generators frequency meter stopped working the day I got it
home so I purchased a Hardy Diesel volt/hz gauge. This gauge was unreadable at the higher voltage.
At this point I thought it might be a moisture problem since I saw a lot of moisture in it a couple days
earlier. I brought the exciter/voltage regulator assembly in the house, checked it out for obvious
problems and tightened a few screws. I noticed some white powder corrosion on some of the diodes
on the VR board that I cleaned off.
A couple days later I reinstalled the exciter/voltage regulator. The generator ran perfectly for about
10 minutes then the voltage meter jumped a couple times, the overvoltage light came on and the
generator kept running.
At the convenience outlet the voltage was about 160 volts and the frequency was about 245 Hz.
The engine was running strong and steady with no speed variations.
I checked with William at Delk’s. He had me disconnect the exciter/voltage regulator and apply 12V
to wires F1 & F2 of the generator. He was expecting 90-120V at the convenience outlet. I received
167v. (I can’t find any of this information in the TM’s) Thinking I might have a bad diode/rectifier on the
generator I removed them. I don’t have a diode checker but they averaged .55 ohms in one direction
and none were shorted.
The problem I am having might be a heat/cold sensitive component, vibration sensitive or one that
breaks down under load. Or a loose connection, although I haven’t found one yet. So I plan to replace
the diodes and go from there. The TM’s say they are 1N1190 & 1N1190R diodes. The only number I can
get off of one diode is 3A699E01. I Can’t find a reference for this.
Can anyone tell me if this is a normal reading for these diodes and give me any suggestions of where to
look next? At some point I will also have to figure out why the generator didn’t shut off on its own but I
thought I would fix the voltage problem first.
Thanks, Brian
It has worked very well until now.
Every month I run it for about an hour to make sure everything works. On 2/1/13 it ran for about 10
seconds with proper voltage and frequency when the over voltage light went on. The voltage meter
jumped to about 160 volts and the generator didn’t shut down as expected.
I shut it down, checked connections and anything else I could come up with and restarted it.
It immediately went to an overvoltage condition and kept running.
I went inside (it was 25 degrees out & windy) and read thru the TM’s looking for anything to check out.
About an hour later I started it again and it ran about 10 seconds with proper voltage and frequency and
then the overvoltage light came on. The generators frequency meter stopped working the day I got it
home so I purchased a Hardy Diesel volt/hz gauge. This gauge was unreadable at the higher voltage.
At this point I thought it might be a moisture problem since I saw a lot of moisture in it a couple days
earlier. I brought the exciter/voltage regulator assembly in the house, checked it out for obvious
problems and tightened a few screws. I noticed some white powder corrosion on some of the diodes
on the VR board that I cleaned off.
A couple days later I reinstalled the exciter/voltage regulator. The generator ran perfectly for about
10 minutes then the voltage meter jumped a couple times, the overvoltage light came on and the
generator kept running.
At the convenience outlet the voltage was about 160 volts and the frequency was about 245 Hz.
The engine was running strong and steady with no speed variations.
I checked with William at Delk’s. He had me disconnect the exciter/voltage regulator and apply 12V
to wires F1 & F2 of the generator. He was expecting 90-120V at the convenience outlet. I received
167v. (I can’t find any of this information in the TM’s) Thinking I might have a bad diode/rectifier on the
generator I removed them. I don’t have a diode checker but they averaged .55 ohms in one direction
and none were shorted.
The problem I am having might be a heat/cold sensitive component, vibration sensitive or one that
breaks down under load. Or a loose connection, although I haven’t found one yet. So I plan to replace
the diodes and go from there. The TM’s say they are 1N1190 & 1N1190R diodes. The only number I can
get off of one diode is 3A699E01. I Can’t find a reference for this.
Can anyone tell me if this is a normal reading for these diodes and give me any suggestions of where to
look next? At some point I will also have to figure out why the generator didn’t shut off on its own but I
thought I would fix the voltage problem first.
Thanks, Brian