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That's a good system:Blower and auger. It is wood pellet fuel or rather 50% pellet and 50% corn, as is the case currently. And my hot water heater is a Geospring heatpump model which uses 600w to run. That leaves plenty of reserve for my 803A.
My home is total electric with a heat pump. The mep-803a runs everything I need to run with only minimal load management. In the summer months, I've ran the central AC, clothes dryer, stove, and all residual loads normally present in the home all at once. If my strip heat were to cycle and the water heater were to run together, that may present a challenge but sensible load management makes this the ideal back generator for my home.
I'm chomping at the bit to actually use it. I run it about 15 minutes every two weeks or so and about twice a year I switch the house to gen power just to insure everything functions as it should.
The biggest pumps I ever saw were those along the levies in New Orleans. I wonder how they compare to Southern California?Yeah, the Metropolitan Water District, in Southern California does that. They have monster diesel driven water pumps.
I run Rotella 15/40 in mine and it hasn't let me down. I too think it is a great choice.Thanks I was reading the manuals and I was not able to find any recommended service intervals for changing the engine oil. I did find that is calls for 15/40 engine oil with Milspec numbers which I am not familiar with. Will something like Shell Rotella 15/40 oil from the local parts store be ok to run in these engines?
Totally agree with you about the engine oils, especially the synthetics. I was still in the Marines in the early 1980's and they also went crazy with testing the oil. We also would replace the engine oil even if the truck had not moved for a year ! I remember arguing with this Gunnery Sargeant about that. He told me that "until he heard otherwise we would do what we were told ! " That of course ended the argument ! At the transit agency we test every oil change. The synthetic oils always come up being in top shape ! That is why I use synthetic in ALL my engines ! Including my lawnmower ! In fact air cooled engines really need that extra insurance . In my last gasoline engine genset (before I went diesel) I used only synthetic oils and when it finally died (the valves sunk into the aluminum head ! ) I took it apart and found the cylinders still had the cross-hatch pattern on them ! That engine (Briggs&Stratton Vanguard 16 HP ) was run for 16 hours every day for 2 years straight !In the 80's, we, (the Army) went crazy on AOAP. The Army Oil Analysis Program. One of the things we found out was that oil doesn't "go bad" by just sitting there, over short times periods. And a year is not considered a long time. Not unless there is high humidity, dust or other pollutants that can somehow enter the lubricating system. That should not happen under normal circumstances. Something else we discovered was the need to NOT change oil as often, when using synthetic oils. It made a believer out of me. Yes, oil filters should be changed on time, but the synthetic oils simply do not break down at anywhere near the pace of normal POL products. The power generation sets used by your good old power company have an oil system that feeds a very small amount of engine oil into the combustion chamber, to burn a small amount off. Why? Well, the operator, if he/she is doing the PM, (preventive maintenance) correctly, will notice the oil level dropping over time, and add new oil. The oil is constantly "refreshed" with the addition of small amounts of new oil being added, so they never need an oil change. Just oil filter change. And of course they submit oil samples to a lab to see what is going on in the engine. This AOAP program saves millions for big companies who no loner just perform a service on a time interval. They only perform maintenance when the oil lab says they have a problem. The normal person never needs something like this.
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