• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

MEP 803A Wet Stacking

JCamp

New member
5
3
3
Location
Massachusetts
I’m using home heating oil #2 to fuel my MEP803 A. I’m adding lubricity additive. I have enough fuel to run the genset day and night, but I’m worried about wet stacking. Is there a rule of thumb around how much load should be on generator to prevent wet stacking? For example, should I run it at minimum 20 or 25% load at night when there isn’t much draw? Or, should I make a point of running it harder by turning on an oven, electric heater, air, conditioner,…

It will be running two standard refrigerators, one below the counter freezer, well pump, and the the usual other things seem pretty low draw.

I’m asking because my mother has medical equipment that should run all night, very low draw but nonetheless it needs to be run consistently. One option is getting a rechargeable battery unit that will supply 120 V to run that equipment, and just turning the generator off at night. However, that wouldn’t run my refrigerators, freezers, and water pump. Any comments or suggestions?
 

rickf

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
3,165
1,727
113
Location
Pemberton, N.J.
Do these sets really wet stack? I would understand it happening if they were running at idle all day but running at rated 1800 rpm would in itself prevent wet stacking.
 

2Pbfeet

Well-known member
446
804
93
Location
Mt. Hamilton, CA
I’m using home heating oil #2 to fuel my MEP803 A. I’m adding lubricity additive. I have enough fuel to run the genset day and night, but I’m worried about wet stacking. Is there a rule of thumb around how much load should be on generator to prevent wet stacking? For example, should I run it at minimum 20 or 25% load at night when there isn’t much draw? Or, should I make a point of running it harder by turning on an oven, electric heater, air, conditioner,…

It will be running two standard refrigerators, one below the counter freezer, well pump, and the the usual other things seem pretty low draw.

I’m asking because my mother has medical equipment that should run all night, very low draw but nonetheless it needs to be run consistently. One option is getting a rechargeable battery unit that will supply 120 V to run that equipment, and just turning the generator off at night. However, that wouldn’t run my refrigerators, freezers, and water pump. Any comments or suggestions?
I would not sweat the wet stacking as long as you periodically load the generator. That said, I do not think it is a great idea to run a diesel with little to no load, and I would look at batteries to provide low power support.

Is this off-grid, or for emergency use?

If it were me, and it is emergency use, I would get batteries for your mother's medical equipment, and I would let everything else be off overnight.

Off-grid would be best served household batteries in my opinion.

All the best,

2Pbfeet
 

Scoobyshep

Well-known member
1,158
1,572
113
Location
Florida
Do these sets really wet stack? I would understand it happening if they were running at idle all day but running at rated 1800 rpm would in itself prevent wet stacking.
Yes because it's not working hard enough to produce enough exhaust heat.

But again it's not something that happens overnight do a good load banking once in awhile and you're good to go
 

Ray70

Well-known member
2,627
6,032
113
Location
West greenwich/RI
Yup, they sure can wet stack!
I've had a handful of 803's carboned up to the point that the valves won't close all the way, Lister Petter even sells a gasket kit called a Decarboning kit which includes everything needed to yank the head off and clean it.
Granted, these were extreme cases where they were too far gone to simply load up and clear out, but a testimony to what can eventually happen if you never load the machine up for hundreds of hours.
 

DieselAddict

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,541
2,090
113
Location
Efland, NC
I had one come through here a couple of months ago that had around 300 hours on it. It smoked and wouldn't take a full load. It peaked out around 8kw. I loaded it up as much as it could hold and let it run. As the exhaust heated up it started spitting out chunks of carbon and the smoke reduced. Once the smoke was mostly gone, I added more load. Wash-rinse-repeat. Once I had it up to 12k of load with only the normal amount of smoke it would show at that level, I knew we were done.

I expect this unit was NEVER run with any significant load on it. It took about 3hrs of running to get it cleared up.

My recipe would look like this - if its reasonable for you and assuming you are running around the clock, get a good load on it for around an hour a day and you will never have a problem with it. A good load as stated above is around 8kw. That is enough to burn out any gunk that is starting to accumulate.
 

CallMeColt

Well-known member
Supporting Vendor
1,050
1,517
113
Location
Wilson County, Texas
Before you go to sleep, run it hard for 20 minuets. When you wake up, run it hard again for 20 minuets. Turning the dryer on will do the trick. I used to do something similar with my MEP-802 at my off grid place when running for days at a time. Load it up with the heater for a bit. 23hrs out of the day, it was 10-20%, sometimes none if the A/C would cycle off.
 

CallMeColt

Well-known member
Supporting Vendor
1,050
1,517
113
Location
Wilson County, Texas
I had one come through here a couple of months ago that had around 300 hours on it. It smoked and wouldn't take a full load. It peaked out around 8kw. I loaded it up as much as it could hold and let it run. As the exhaust heated up it started spitting out chunks of carbon and the smoke reduced. Once the smoke was mostly gone, I added more load. Wash-rinse-repeat. Once I had it up to 12k of load with only the normal amount of smoke it would show at that level, I knew we were done.

I expect this unit was NEVER run with any significant load on it. It took about 3hrs of running to get it cleared up.

My recipe would look like this - if its reasonable for you and assuming you are running around the clock, get a good load on it for around an hour a day and you will never have a problem with it. A good load as stated above is around 8kw. That is enough to burn out any gunk that is starting to accumulate.
Not to derail the post, but I have a unit that I have almost given up on that spits chunks at 50% and will slowly chug & die at 100%. I never let it go for an extended period, only like 20 minuets. Almost 5,000hrs but otherwise looks healthy. Should I just send it at 50-60% for an hour and see if it clears up?
 

Ray70

Well-known member
2,627
6,032
113
Location
West greenwich/RI
Most folks say to step up the load sequentially, allowing enough time between steps for the smoke to clear out. You could start at 50% for an hour, if it clears at 50% step it up to 75% and leave it until it clears again, then step it up and see if she will handle 100%
If you still have no luck at 100% try taking the muffler off and retest. at 5000 hours if its severely wet stacked the issue could be in the head and not the exhaust. A carbon choked head is much harder to clear out by just running it hard, you may need to remove the exhaust manifold and scrape out the exhaust ports manually.
 

CallMeColt

Well-known member
Supporting Vendor
1,050
1,517
113
Location
Wilson County, Texas
Most folks say to step up the load sequentially, allowing enough time between steps for the smoke to clear out. You could start at 50% for an hour, if it clears at 50% step it up to 75% and leave it until it clears again, then step it up and see if she will handle 100%
If you still have no luck at 100% try taking the muffler off and retest. at 5000 hours if its severely wet stacked the issue could be in the head and not the exhaust. A carbon choked head is much harder to clear out by just running it hard, you may need to remove the exhaust manifold and scrape out the exhaust ports manually.
I let it soak with ATF in both the tops of the cylinders & more. It cleaned a lot out. But thinking one of the valves is not letting a cylinder fire right. Probably all chunked up. Exhaust gets into the crank case. All making sense now...
 

DieselAddict

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,541
2,090
113
Location
Efland, NC
Not to derail the post, but I have a unit that I have almost given up on that spits chunks at 50% and will slowly chug & die at 100%. I never let it go for an extended period, only like 20 minuets. Almost 5,000hrs but otherwise looks healthy. Should I just send it at 50-60% for an hour and see if it clears up?
Yep, load it as much as it can hold without chugging down and wait. If it’s spitting out chunks then it’s clearing itself. Bump up the load as it can take more. It should recover.

The worst one I ever got was an 802 that couldn’t even hold 2kw. After a few hours of “therapy” it would take 6.5kw.
 

DieselAddict

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,541
2,090
113
Location
Efland, NC
I let it soak with ATF in both the tops of the cylinders & more. It cleaned a lot out. But thinking one of the valves is not letting a cylinder fire right. Probably all chunked up. Exhaust gets into the crank case. All making sense now...
Yea, if it’s not running in all cylinders, you need to resolve that first. If you are taking everything apart to unstick valves, you can put the muffler in a smoldering fire and cook out the junk. Will give a good head start on things when you put it back together.
 

CallMeColt

Well-known member
Supporting Vendor
1,050
1,517
113
Location
Wilson County, Texas
Yea, if it’s not running in all cylinders, you need to resolve that first. If you are taking everything apart to unstick valves, you can put the muffler in a smoldering fire and cook out the junk. Will give a good head start on things when you put it back together.
I was a little worried I would cause more damage or something as with all of them, I hadn't seen one that stacked up yet! It didn't show any of the other signs of it like the ooz at the muffle gasket, etc.
 

Ray70

Well-known member
2,627
6,032
113
Location
West greenwich/RI
I let it soak with ATF in both the tops of the cylinders & more. It cleaned a lot out. But thinking one of the valves is not letting a cylinder fire right. Probably all chunked up. Exhaust gets into the crank case. All making sense now...
I've had several 803's with low hours that were caked up with carbon to the point that none of the 4 cylinders had compression due to the valves being held off their seats by carbon buildup.
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
16,896
24,469
113
Location
Burgkunstadt, Germany
Most folks say to step up the load sequentially, allowing enough time between steps for the smoke to clear out. You could start at 50% for an hour, if it clears at 50% step it up to 75% and leave it until it clears again, then step it up and see if she will handle 100%
If you still have no luck at 100% try taking the muffler off and retest. at 5000 hours if its severely wet stacked the issue could be in the head and not the exhaust. A carbon choked head is much harder to clear out by just running it hard, you may need to remove the exhaust manifold and scrape out the exhaust ports manually.

This is the proper way to do it.
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks