eng251ine
New member
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- Frederick, MD
I recently purchased several nice sets from GL, two 003a's and one nice 004a. I have been reading the posts in this forum with great interest and learning quite a bit from the very knowledgable members here.
I have done quite a bit reading about the wet stacking and am anxious to devise a way to avoid ruining a perfectly good genset. I do find it a bit wasteful to hook up a bunch of load and run a generator just testing/excercising purposes.
I started thinking, rather than hook up a bunch of dummy loads and run the unit, could there be a more productive use for the power being generated? I started to think about people who install solar systems on their houses that put excess energy back into the grid during peak production. Wouldn't it be great to be able to hook a back up generator up inthe same fashion? I've read a bit in the TM's about paralleling the 004's...I know this isn't possible with the 003's. Could an 004 be paralleled with the grid so that energy produced during load testing/monthly excercising be put into the grid?
A quick google search revealed that for larger gensets (15kw) and above, this is a common practice in the UK and is billed as a way to offset the fuel costs associated with monthly excercising.
Any Thoughts?
I have done quite a bit reading about the wet stacking and am anxious to devise a way to avoid ruining a perfectly good genset. I do find it a bit wasteful to hook up a bunch of load and run a generator just testing/excercising purposes.
I started thinking, rather than hook up a bunch of dummy loads and run the unit, could there be a more productive use for the power being generated? I started to think about people who install solar systems on their houses that put excess energy back into the grid during peak production. Wouldn't it be great to be able to hook a back up generator up inthe same fashion? I've read a bit in the TM's about paralleling the 004's...I know this isn't possible with the 003's. Could an 004 be paralleled with the grid so that energy produced during load testing/monthly excercising be put into the grid?
A quick google search revealed that for larger gensets (15kw) and above, this is a common practice in the UK and is billed as a way to offset the fuel costs associated with monthly excercising.
Any Thoughts?