WillsC
Member
- 37
- 8
- 8
- Location
- Inverness, FL
When hurricane Helena came through we lost power for about 10 hours and the gen ran perfectly. During hurricane Milton we were out of power for 3 days and again the generator made life so so much easier but there was one issue I hope to get some advice on.
1. The fuel gauge which had been erratic stopped working and simply stayed at 3/4 tank on the display and stayed at 0% on the remote start display. Tested it today and it is bad no problem.
2. On the first day out of power the gen was purring along when out of the blue it stumbled badly and died, it didn't open the contactor just died. I had just put 5 gallon of fuel in it about 3? hours before so knew it couldn't be out of fuel. Went in to the outbuilding that the gen calls home and there was diesel all over the concrete and sprayed all inside the case. After filling it and restarting, saw that the leak was on top of the engine. Took the top off the gen and the far right hand injector return line? I think that is what it is, the T had broken and was spewing fuel. Luckily for me I happened to have a drip irrigation T that was the same size and while not ideal did the job and saw us through till the power came back. Have now ordered 4 new brass T's and will install them when they arrive...can't believe they use plastic or nylon whatever it is for those parts.
I was sure though that if the fuel got too low the contactor should open and the machine would shut down? Today when testing the fuel sender I took out the other sender and the tube is coated in a sticky brown substance which had both of the floats stuck to the shaft. First what can I used to clean off that tube and second is there something you can add to the fuel tank to prevent it happening again?
1. The fuel gauge which had been erratic stopped working and simply stayed at 3/4 tank on the display and stayed at 0% on the remote start display. Tested it today and it is bad no problem.
2. On the first day out of power the gen was purring along when out of the blue it stumbled badly and died, it didn't open the contactor just died. I had just put 5 gallon of fuel in it about 3? hours before so knew it couldn't be out of fuel. Went in to the outbuilding that the gen calls home and there was diesel all over the concrete and sprayed all inside the case. After filling it and restarting, saw that the leak was on top of the engine. Took the top off the gen and the far right hand injector return line? I think that is what it is, the T had broken and was spewing fuel. Luckily for me I happened to have a drip irrigation T that was the same size and while not ideal did the job and saw us through till the power came back. Have now ordered 4 new brass T's and will install them when they arrive...can't believe they use plastic or nylon whatever it is for those parts.
I was sure though that if the fuel got too low the contactor should open and the machine would shut down? Today when testing the fuel sender I took out the other sender and the tube is coated in a sticky brown substance which had both of the floats stuck to the shaft. First what can I used to clean off that tube and second is there something you can add to the fuel tank to prevent it happening again?