iamironshan
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Hello all,
First of all, first of all I am new here, and probably obviously new to military gensets! So I have a few questions that I hope you all can provide some insite on.
A little back story:
My boyfriend and I recently purchased and moved into a travel trailer. We moved it onto a piece of property that does not have any electric, sewage, or water on it. Since it costs so much to get electric out there (~$10,000), we decided to go with a military genset to use whenever we just need to charge the batteries or want to watch a movie. We do plan to one day to solar, and have the genset as a back up.
When we first received the genset (refurb from ebay. Seller had excellent reviews), it took a few tries to start it up, but we figured it was just because it hadn't been run in a little while. Everything seemed good, albeit loud! All the gauges work, the only thing-that we knew before we even purchased it-was that it can't be switched to three phase. However, after that, each time we try to start it up it takes a few tries. Is this normal? We have seen videos where people are able to get it started up first try, no problem. Also, a couple weeks after we purchased this genset the hertz meter stopped working. Is this something that is easily replaceable? Or is it easy enough to find the right operating load without having this meter? Additionally, last week we went out to start it, as our batteries were running low in the trailer so we needed to juice up. Well, the light on the genset was left on, so the battery was dead. In order to get it to start up we had to use my boyfriend's 2005 Nissan Titan to jump the batteries so we could get it running. We tried to run it again last night, the batteries appeared to be dead, and no lights were left on. This time, we did not have his truck so we had to use my 2000 Saturn sedan to get rejuice. We ran it for probably 3 hours last night, and this morning the batteries were completely dead again. One note to add here is that 2 bolts that tighten the cables onto the batteries were missing, one because it fell off and we lost it, and the other because we took it off so we could go to Ace to get a replacement. We thought maybe this caused a loose connection with the batteries, which would make it difficult to start. However, upon replacing the two bolts, we were still unable to get it to start.
So a couple of questions with this: we spoke with someone who said we need a 24v supply in order to jump the genset, and that jumping with a 12 v would cause damage. What would we use for a 24 v supply? And in using the 12 v supply, what gets damaged? That vehicle supplying the 12v, the genset, or both? Also, what would cause the batteries to be dying so quickly? They are brand new batteries. Is it possible that jumping those two times with vehicles has already damaged it?
Lastly, any recommendations on how to set it to run optimally and most efficiently to power our travel trailer?
Thank you for your time and help!
First of all, first of all I am new here, and probably obviously new to military gensets! So I have a few questions that I hope you all can provide some insite on.
A little back story:
My boyfriend and I recently purchased and moved into a travel trailer. We moved it onto a piece of property that does not have any electric, sewage, or water on it. Since it costs so much to get electric out there (~$10,000), we decided to go with a military genset to use whenever we just need to charge the batteries or want to watch a movie. We do plan to one day to solar, and have the genset as a back up.
When we first received the genset (refurb from ebay. Seller had excellent reviews), it took a few tries to start it up, but we figured it was just because it hadn't been run in a little while. Everything seemed good, albeit loud! All the gauges work, the only thing-that we knew before we even purchased it-was that it can't be switched to three phase. However, after that, each time we try to start it up it takes a few tries. Is this normal? We have seen videos where people are able to get it started up first try, no problem. Also, a couple weeks after we purchased this genset the hertz meter stopped working. Is this something that is easily replaceable? Or is it easy enough to find the right operating load without having this meter? Additionally, last week we went out to start it, as our batteries were running low in the trailer so we needed to juice up. Well, the light on the genset was left on, so the battery was dead. In order to get it to start up we had to use my boyfriend's 2005 Nissan Titan to jump the batteries so we could get it running. We tried to run it again last night, the batteries appeared to be dead, and no lights were left on. This time, we did not have his truck so we had to use my 2000 Saturn sedan to get rejuice. We ran it for probably 3 hours last night, and this morning the batteries were completely dead again. One note to add here is that 2 bolts that tighten the cables onto the batteries were missing, one because it fell off and we lost it, and the other because we took it off so we could go to Ace to get a replacement. We thought maybe this caused a loose connection with the batteries, which would make it difficult to start. However, upon replacing the two bolts, we were still unable to get it to start.
So a couple of questions with this: we spoke with someone who said we need a 24v supply in order to jump the genset, and that jumping with a 12 v would cause damage. What would we use for a 24 v supply? And in using the 12 v supply, what gets damaged? That vehicle supplying the 12v, the genset, or both? Also, what would cause the batteries to be dying so quickly? They are brand new batteries. Is it possible that jumping those two times with vehicles has already damaged it?
Lastly, any recommendations on how to set it to run optimally and most efficiently to power our travel trailer?
Thank you for your time and help!
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