Hi all, first time posting, but have been lurking and reading through the wealth of information on this site. I have worked on several of the 803 & 802s now, and have learned a lot. This particular unit will not make full power without tripping the overload. I'm using an old air handler with a 10kw heat strip with the squirrel cage fan. If I disconnect a few strips it will run those for over an hour (about 7kw checking with clamp on meter). Anything past that it trips the overload. With the battle short on, and adding a few small heaters, I have had it up to 13.5kw for about 15 minutes. Overload light comes on at about 1-2 minutes.
Things I have checked/done. Cleaned the S8 and S6 over and over, cycled the S8 100x or more, tried Deoxit, and a couple other contact cleaners.
Swapped the K8 with another one, same result. Also did the K8 test per the TM, light came on at about 10 seconds (manual says approx. 1 minute, both relays turned overload light on right about 10 sec)
Ohmed burden resistors, disconnected 1, 2, & 3 from K8 and 14 from the S8, all were right about 7.9, book says 7.8 is upper limit, is this enough to cause concern? While running with a full load, 5.6v on R-10 R-11, 8.3 v on R-12
CT coils appear to be correct, I believe it was 8 loops per circle.
Gone through and tightened/cleaned connections in the compartment where the S8 is and behind the control panel. Found several screws on the S8 that took a good half turn to snug up.
Compared wiring with another good unit, everything around the S8 appears to be in the correct spot.
S8 has been out of this unit before, rear mounting plate only has 1 bolt, and 1 corner is busted. All 4 little ones are in on the front, and the 2 larger studs are missing the nuts. Doesn't look recently as everything was equally dirty/dusty.
I ran the same 10kw-13kw load on the 3 phase setting and it lasted longer, but still tripped the overload.
Interesting thing I found was, on the burden resistors, R-12 gets noticeably hotter than R-10 & 11, I was watching with an infrared camera, a good 100 degrees hotter than the other 2. Also on the CT coils, the one closest to the S-8 was slightly hotter than the other 2 (10-15 degrees, just enough to show a difference on the camera. So I'm not sure if theres something, say a bad connection in the S8 that is causing the extra heat, or if the burden resistor is bad and theres my issue?
Unit was wet-stacked a little, at first it would pull the 10kw load with a good bit of smoke and carbon sparks, but have run it for about 2-2.5 hours at the 7kw load plus several 15 min runs at 10-13kw and it seems to have cleared up a lot. I don't think that is my issue at this point.
Unit was rebuilt in 2010 by the Albany, Ga Marine Corps base, according to the date/hours written on the filter, it was not used after rebuild, only a couple hours on the meter over what was written on the filter, date on filter matched date on rebuild plate.
Initially the unit ran longer than 1-2 min with the 10kw load, maybe 5-10 minutes. Unit needed a new fuel pump, so stopped, ordered a pump, replaced, and now it is tripping the overload every time. I did cycle with the S8 switch in that time, so though I just stirred up some dirty contacts, but cleaning it has not changed much. Have 2 other units that I cleaned the switch 1 time and that fixed both of them.
Any help will be much appreciated!
Things I have checked/done. Cleaned the S8 and S6 over and over, cycled the S8 100x or more, tried Deoxit, and a couple other contact cleaners.
Swapped the K8 with another one, same result. Also did the K8 test per the TM, light came on at about 10 seconds (manual says approx. 1 minute, both relays turned overload light on right about 10 sec)
Ohmed burden resistors, disconnected 1, 2, & 3 from K8 and 14 from the S8, all were right about 7.9, book says 7.8 is upper limit, is this enough to cause concern? While running with a full load, 5.6v on R-10 R-11, 8.3 v on R-12
CT coils appear to be correct, I believe it was 8 loops per circle.
Gone through and tightened/cleaned connections in the compartment where the S8 is and behind the control panel. Found several screws on the S8 that took a good half turn to snug up.
Compared wiring with another good unit, everything around the S8 appears to be in the correct spot.
S8 has been out of this unit before, rear mounting plate only has 1 bolt, and 1 corner is busted. All 4 little ones are in on the front, and the 2 larger studs are missing the nuts. Doesn't look recently as everything was equally dirty/dusty.
I ran the same 10kw-13kw load on the 3 phase setting and it lasted longer, but still tripped the overload.
Interesting thing I found was, on the burden resistors, R-12 gets noticeably hotter than R-10 & 11, I was watching with an infrared camera, a good 100 degrees hotter than the other 2. Also on the CT coils, the one closest to the S-8 was slightly hotter than the other 2 (10-15 degrees, just enough to show a difference on the camera. So I'm not sure if theres something, say a bad connection in the S8 that is causing the extra heat, or if the burden resistor is bad and theres my issue?
Unit was wet-stacked a little, at first it would pull the 10kw load with a good bit of smoke and carbon sparks, but have run it for about 2-2.5 hours at the 7kw load plus several 15 min runs at 10-13kw and it seems to have cleared up a lot. I don't think that is my issue at this point.
Unit was rebuilt in 2010 by the Albany, Ga Marine Corps base, according to the date/hours written on the filter, it was not used after rebuild, only a couple hours on the meter over what was written on the filter, date on filter matched date on rebuild plate.
Initially the unit ran longer than 1-2 min with the 10kw load, maybe 5-10 minutes. Unit needed a new fuel pump, so stopped, ordered a pump, replaced, and now it is tripping the overload every time. I did cycle with the S8 switch in that time, so though I just stirred up some dirty contacts, but cleaning it has not changed much. Have 2 other units that I cleaned the switch 1 time and that fixed both of them.
Any help will be much appreciated!