Isaac-1
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We are talking about this one http://www.govliquidation.com/auction/view?auctionId=6679188&convertTo=USD
Ike
Ike
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GSA went to the bidder 1 & 2 ect, there were a few I remember before when your ID was shown that a 2x4 soaked in oil is what I wanted to use on them,...There is for a fact shill bidders, I dont know how tight their affiliation is with GL but none the less.
Hah.. Thats what I buy two mep-007's for
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a196615.pdfsend it to me if you dont mind. I like to read lots of random crap.
jrespecki@gmail.com
First, do you have a link to volume 2? I'm curious after reading through most of volume 1.
Second, there was some very interesting reading in there relating to several recent threads. What I found most telling were the causes of the MTBF for MEP002A and 003A gensets. Simply put, problem #1 on the 002As was undercharged batteries. Apparently the big batteries on the 003A were a better idea than they seemed. The 002A muffler got flagged for some reason (same part as the 003A, but doesn't appear on the 003A failed component list?). After that, it was four gauges, the starter, and a regulator (they don't state whether it's the AC or DC reg, but I'm guessing DC).
On the 003A (many more hours of logged runtime) many of the same failure inducing components are listed.
Conclusions:
- Yes, the gauges often are problematic. Keeping a good multimeter and a Kill-A-Watt handy does away with most of those concerns for home use.
- The electric fuel pumps weren't generally a problem in 1988. Even if they are a problem now, we have three and we need one. I suspect that double redundancy is why they didn't appear in either of the failure-inducing component lists.
- Keeping the batteries fully charged is critical and the operating units had trouble with this, particularly on the MEP002A with its smaller batteries. Mr Solargizer is definitely your friend. They cite the starter on the MEP002A but not the 003A. I suspect it's because of the smaller batteries and overcurrent in cranking caused by undervoltage (a weak battery).
- The regulator cited in the document is probably the DC regulator, and it's probably the result of jump-starting weak gensets. OTOH, bad regulators would equal weak batteries...
- Fuel system problems are cited, but it's mostly the filtration components. Injection pump is mentioned, but it's infrequent compared to the other items.
Overall, it's gratifying how rare major component failures are in these lists. Once you've got an MEP002A/003A running, a small stock of easily changed components is all you're likely to need to keep it running.
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