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Howdy,Clean looking machine Mike!
Howdy,That is a amazing engine paint job, wish I had that attention to detail. The paint on mine has been fried in the Barstow sun and is very chalk like- Couple of questions. 1. How much are the LTT-TQG trailers worth? Im half tempted to sell mine, or put a wooden deck on it and keep it. 2. Wet stacking is pretty rare on 4 cycle diesels as diesels run the "leanest" during min throttle- Do these units consume oil? I do know the old 2 stroke Detroit 2/71 gensets had issues but mine seems to blow really clean exhaust.
I pulled mine off the trailer and threw it in the back of my dodge for now- just to keep it out of the rain as I don't have room inside my 28x50 shop for the trailer
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Howdy,Daybreak, i'm very curious where you purchased it. If you don't want to share, i understand.
Howdy Guy,Wet stacking has been a power generation problem for ever. The MEP-002 to MEP-006 sets had the same problem, if not worse. The military always allotted a generator much bigger then the job required. With good reason. Most units did not, could not and will never master, fingering loads. Most people have no idea how, and even when done right, it only takes one or two fools with a coffee pot and a microwave to spoil the figures. I once went to a communications site that had problems with the gen sets maintaining loads in the winter. After I took a pair of side cutters and clipped off the plug ends of four heaters, the problem went away.
Dont forget that these sets are being sent from all over the world, back to the USA. Saw some ready for shipment in Graf Germany yesterday. A buddy of mine there who is the "Expediter" for equipment transportation said they are going to Andover. From there its anyone guess.[/QUOTE]I purchased the PU-798A (MEP-803A) from GovPlanet at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. So it was here on the east coast somewhere. I do not see the need for a woodland camo unit to be in southern California. I understand up in Washington and Oregon.
I suspect the problem here is dirty contacts in the AM-VM switch. Part of it's function is to connect the "burden" resistors to the output current transformer. If the contacts are dirty they will cause added resistance in the burden resistor circuit. The short story is that the dirty contacts will make the genset "think" it has a higher load on it than the actual load causing the %Load meter and the overload relay to think there is a much greater load on the generator than what's actually on the generator.... 1 of them is registering a 75% load with only shop fluorescent lights on that registered 25% on others
when I turned on an AC unit the surge tripped the overload breaker...
Do the generator Voltage & Frequency gauges read OK before and after applying the load?...a second machine only makes the lights flicker...