Glockfan
Member
- 274
- 16
- 18
- Location
- Brigham City, Utah
I believe I used 4AWG copper...Nice installation Glockfan! Thank you for documenting and sharing too! What gouge wire you have used between the generator and the manual switch?
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
I believe I used 4AWG copper...Nice installation Glockfan! Thank you for documenting and sharing too! What gouge wire you have used between the generator and the manual switch?
I used 4awg for the hots and neutral, and 6awg for the ground. Depending on run length you may need to size up.Nice installation Glockfan! Thank you for documenting and sharing too! What gouge wire you have used between the generator and the manual switch?
Thanks for the great info. I am setting up a home power unit and leaving the unit on my trailer so I can use it at my farm also. I will just hook it up when Power is out. The electrician didn't unhook the bar from ground to neutral... I do have a ground rod I hook it to when parked for home power. Should I unhook the bar ( G to N) when using gen for home power? Also, do your Hertz drop when you turn on a large draw like a dryer? I think my Hertz drops to 57 or 58. Is this okay? I trust the electrician, but he had never seen a MEP 803a before. So not sure if he knew all the little issues. Great job on your set up.I decided that this is going to be my 15 year home and that we are done moving so I wanted a more permanent installation of my 10kW MEP-803A. I wanted a safe and legal means of connecting it directly to my service panel so that my wife can just throw one lever to restore power after starting the generator up. It made the most sense to me to go with the DPDT safety switch. The county inspector and GA Power were actually surprised to see that I went this route and actually left here smiling... Here are some pics of the finished job.
View attachment 511660View attachment 511659View attachment 511658View attachment 511661View attachment 511662View attachment 511663View attachment 511664View attachment 511665
I usually purposely keep mine adjusted up to about 62 Hz in anticipation of load draws like the heat pump, etc. once I am running at 50%-75% load then the Hz normalizes to around 60 but it fluctuates with varying current draw. Most modern electrical devices will function fine at 50-60 Hz.Thanks for the great info. I am setting up a home power unit and leaving the unit on my trailer so I can use it at my farm also. I will just hook it up when Power is out. The electrician didn't unhook the bar from ground to neutral... I do have a ground rod I hook it to when parked for home power. Should I unhook the bar ( G to N) when using gen for home power? Also, do your Hertz drop when you turn on a large draw like a dryer? I think my Hertz drops to 57 or 58. Is this okay? I trust the electrician, but he had never seen a MEP 803a before. So not sure if he knew all the little issues. Great job on your set up.
When everything is hitting the fan, you want ALL your hardware operational:Thanks for the tips. It helps reduce the unknown for a newbie like me. You started a great thread here. Lot of info in one place. I will set the Hertz at just above 60 and watch it with a big pull on it. There seems to be no pull on the engine. The unit is much stronger than I thought. The electrician was impressed.
Is that kind of the rule-of-thumb for optimal (+/-) generator use:Howdy,
You are probably better off running you house as you would and then set it to 60Hz. That way the swing will be in your sweet spot of use. If you look at any of my videos, you will see at first start, and no-load, I have all mine around the 61-62Hz. I try to keep a average percent used anywhere from 50%-100% usage. Always double check the gauge with a real multi-meter to insure its reading correctly volts and Hz.
Actually the closer you are to 100% the better. Diesel engines perform better when they are running at their factory designed peak for ultimate performance and economy.Is that kind of the rule-of-thumb for optimal (+/-) generator use:
- To be running (ideally) at 50% of the unit capacity?
Hi.
So if it's a 10kW generator, then my math is telling me that at max (10kW) usage, I'd need a ~85A wire (10,000W/120V = 83.33A) If so, for a distance of about 20 feet from my generator to the connector on the house, what wire should I use? My Google-fu is finding that it should be 3GA wire. Is that what you guys are using, in anticipation of max loads?
TIA!
So I power the house with 242volts as that is what FPL provides to my box. I use a 4 core 6 ga wire (L1, L3, Neutral and Ground). The spec for the wire was 600v/45amps. Hope this helps. These Generators can actual produce more than 10KW for brief periods I have seen it push 14KW on occasion when the AC cuts in.
Here is the link on Amazon if this helps:
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B00LI4I5JU/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1
This just ran for 7 days straight as we lost power due to Hurricane Irma. It had no issues with the load on this cable. Powered the whole house must have had 10 neighbors asking about the MEP-803a and how to get one.
good luck.
m
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!