OldWoodsDiesel
New member
- 3
- 1
- 3
- Location
- Chester county, PA
First of all - to all of you here who have served our country - thank you sincerely.
Second - i'm a new member, but have been reading many of the useful posts on here the last couple of years as i've worked on minor things on my generator, so thank you for that as well.
As of last night, i encountered what i'd consider a non-minor issue. The short of it is:
unit was running for about 30 hours straight during a power outage with zero problems.
i shut it down to install a circuit breaker in-line with output (see unit history below for more info on this)
started it back up again (with new breaker in off (open) position but output voltage won't come up (240V 1Ph setting) - first time this has ever happened
Shut it down and consult my uncle who worked on these things for years for the coast guard
Observe field flash relay, then eventually manually flash exciter circuit to no avail
check voltages on regulator terminals and get the following:
Quad: 3.3vac 0.0vdc running, 300ohms off
Excite: 1.5vdc running
120v sense: 6vac running
Voltage adjust knob: 2.5kohm
Oh and my unit does have the quad fuse, BUT only yesterday did I notice that the previous owner had put both terminals on the same side of the fuse, thereby rendering it useless and the windings unprotected - wish I had noticed that sooner!
From my readings on here it seems that either my voltage regulator is shot and/or my quad windings are cooked. Hopefully no damage to the exiciter field or main windings, but I plan to test all those connectoins individually.
Advice from my uncle is to test function without the regulator: first unlook one of the quad wires and fire the engine up. See if voltage on the quad wires comes up to ~60vac (as I've read it should be on this forum). Then separately, remove exciter wires from regulator and apply 6VDC (via latern battery or similar) and main monitor output voltage. Obviously, it won't be regulated, useful voltage, but if it comes up to ~200+ volts, at least it’s a good indicator the exciter windings and main windings are OK.
Anything other than this expected behavior would lead to pulling the cover off the end of the generator head and physically inspecting diodes, etc.
Any other thoughts anyone might care to share?
If the regulator and/or quad windings test as suspect, it seems going with @kloppk's regulator replacement option is a relatively cheap hopeful solution. Any dissension?
______________end of current issue - read below if you want to donate the next 5 mins of your life only_______________________
Now for the back story on the unit in case anyone is interested:
Bought it in '13 for $400 with ~4000 hrs on the unit. Its an 07 Fermont unit, reset by letterkenny depot in 2010 and back from Jalalabad (at least so says the sheets taped to the outside). Definitely saw some service and rebuilds/repairs in its day, but motor looked good via internet auction images (no excessive rust on manifold, etc). All gauges were present and all wiring looked nominal. Only things missing were batteries and alternator. Obviously farmed for parts, so I took a gamble that I could bring it back to live.
Found the alternator and pulley online for $400 total (now an $800 generator), changed, fluids, installed $150 worth of batteries (now a $950 generator) and fired her up for the first time. Much to my pleasant surprise, she roared to life and put out clean power on whatever output I set her to. Used her about half a dozen times during power outages (we are deep in the easter portion of Penn's Woods and lose power regularly).
Fast forward 3 uncanny years with no outages more than a few hours. During these years, I kept her in a shed with a Noco charger on the batteries so ensure she started when needed (had dead batteries after one extended storage period and didn’t want to go through the rigomarole of charging batteries with my truck again). Anyway, I finally build a proper shed for her to live in next to the house permanantly - with aux fuel line from my 1100 gallon heating oil storage tanks - and the power goes out a few weeks later. I happy fire her up, check that ll gauges are nominal and go inside. All is well for a few hours, but then the power turns off. The output circuit interrupter had tripped - and ammeter is bounding all over the place. Take off the 3 controls side panels and find a MASSIVE mouse brothel. Cleaned it out, checked and cleaned connections for days and days, but all to no avail. By the by, I'm pretty convinced my trickle charger on the batteries in the shed made a perfect little winter time heater for these more annoying of God's creatures.
Anyway, I troubleshot that for a while more (only thing I didn’t check was the shunt resistors themselves), but after convincing myself that there was no actual short or internal overload present, eventually gave up when the next power outage came along and took power directly from the hot side of the circuit interrupter relay. Monitored everything closely with an ammeter and both the generator and house were happy for about a weeks worth of cumulative outages
Fast forward another couple weeks to the present and I decide to get a little safer by putting a 25A 240V slow-blow circuit breaker right after the voltage reconnection switch. For 50 bucks I figured the extra safety of not burning up the generator or my house should a short occur between the unit and my breaker box was worth it.
Well, she never recovered from that install - though immediately after the failed startup, I removed the breaker with no change. I can't see how the breaker is the problem, but rather figure that 30 hr run was the last few hours that some component had in it, and the breaker addition is just coincidence.
OK, there's my generator story. Thanks for reading if you made it this far. Looking forward to any wisdom you much more experienced folks may have to offer.
Second - i'm a new member, but have been reading many of the useful posts on here the last couple of years as i've worked on minor things on my generator, so thank you for that as well.
As of last night, i encountered what i'd consider a non-minor issue. The short of it is:
unit was running for about 30 hours straight during a power outage with zero problems.
i shut it down to install a circuit breaker in-line with output (see unit history below for more info on this)
started it back up again (with new breaker in off (open) position but output voltage won't come up (240V 1Ph setting) - first time this has ever happened
Shut it down and consult my uncle who worked on these things for years for the coast guard
Observe field flash relay, then eventually manually flash exciter circuit to no avail
check voltages on regulator terminals and get the following:
Quad: 3.3vac 0.0vdc running, 300ohms off
Excite: 1.5vdc running
120v sense: 6vac running
Voltage adjust knob: 2.5kohm
Oh and my unit does have the quad fuse, BUT only yesterday did I notice that the previous owner had put both terminals on the same side of the fuse, thereby rendering it useless and the windings unprotected - wish I had noticed that sooner!
From my readings on here it seems that either my voltage regulator is shot and/or my quad windings are cooked. Hopefully no damage to the exiciter field or main windings, but I plan to test all those connectoins individually.
Advice from my uncle is to test function without the regulator: first unlook one of the quad wires and fire the engine up. See if voltage on the quad wires comes up to ~60vac (as I've read it should be on this forum). Then separately, remove exciter wires from regulator and apply 6VDC (via latern battery or similar) and main monitor output voltage. Obviously, it won't be regulated, useful voltage, but if it comes up to ~200+ volts, at least it’s a good indicator the exciter windings and main windings are OK.
Anything other than this expected behavior would lead to pulling the cover off the end of the generator head and physically inspecting diodes, etc.
Any other thoughts anyone might care to share?
If the regulator and/or quad windings test as suspect, it seems going with @kloppk's regulator replacement option is a relatively cheap hopeful solution. Any dissension?
______________end of current issue - read below if you want to donate the next 5 mins of your life only_______________________
Now for the back story on the unit in case anyone is interested:
Bought it in '13 for $400 with ~4000 hrs on the unit. Its an 07 Fermont unit, reset by letterkenny depot in 2010 and back from Jalalabad (at least so says the sheets taped to the outside). Definitely saw some service and rebuilds/repairs in its day, but motor looked good via internet auction images (no excessive rust on manifold, etc). All gauges were present and all wiring looked nominal. Only things missing were batteries and alternator. Obviously farmed for parts, so I took a gamble that I could bring it back to live.
Found the alternator and pulley online for $400 total (now an $800 generator), changed, fluids, installed $150 worth of batteries (now a $950 generator) and fired her up for the first time. Much to my pleasant surprise, she roared to life and put out clean power on whatever output I set her to. Used her about half a dozen times during power outages (we are deep in the easter portion of Penn's Woods and lose power regularly).
Fast forward 3 uncanny years with no outages more than a few hours. During these years, I kept her in a shed with a Noco charger on the batteries so ensure she started when needed (had dead batteries after one extended storage period and didn’t want to go through the rigomarole of charging batteries with my truck again). Anyway, I finally build a proper shed for her to live in next to the house permanantly - with aux fuel line from my 1100 gallon heating oil storage tanks - and the power goes out a few weeks later. I happy fire her up, check that ll gauges are nominal and go inside. All is well for a few hours, but then the power turns off. The output circuit interrupter had tripped - and ammeter is bounding all over the place. Take off the 3 controls side panels and find a MASSIVE mouse brothel. Cleaned it out, checked and cleaned connections for days and days, but all to no avail. By the by, I'm pretty convinced my trickle charger on the batteries in the shed made a perfect little winter time heater for these more annoying of God's creatures.
Anyway, I troubleshot that for a while more (only thing I didn’t check was the shunt resistors themselves), but after convincing myself that there was no actual short or internal overload present, eventually gave up when the next power outage came along and took power directly from the hot side of the circuit interrupter relay. Monitored everything closely with an ammeter and both the generator and house were happy for about a weeks worth of cumulative outages
Fast forward another couple weeks to the present and I decide to get a little safer by putting a 25A 240V slow-blow circuit breaker right after the voltage reconnection switch. For 50 bucks I figured the extra safety of not burning up the generator or my house should a short occur between the unit and my breaker box was worth it.
Well, she never recovered from that install - though immediately after the failed startup, I removed the breaker with no change. I can't see how the breaker is the problem, but rather figure that 30 hr run was the last few hours that some component had in it, and the breaker addition is just coincidence.
OK, there's my generator story. Thanks for reading if you made it this far. Looking forward to any wisdom you much more experienced folks may have to offer.