Chainbreaker
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I finally found a MEP-003a 10kw unit to add to augment my MEP-002a herd that was close enough for a 1/2 day recovery drive. I need 10kw capability to run AC unit during any hot summer day outages... We been lucky with summer outages occurring during reasonable summer temperatures so far...
First some background info...sorry a bit long bear with me... there is a critical mystery issue: The MEP-003a I located off Craigslist hadn't been run for 4 years since it was last used during a long-extended power outage by the owner. Owner said it had been kept under cover since then & it had not been started since & had dead batteries. I took 2 charged batteries with me intending to test start it but when I looked in the fuel tank I decided not to as fuel looked bad... a bit cloudy & inside tank was heavily rusted appearing to have accumulated humidity/water in fuel system (casualty of Oregon high humidity wet winters). I chose not to test run it for fear of passing bad fuel further towards injection pump & injectors.
Anyway, my initial visual inspection of this unit told me it was worth more than the asking price (even if by chance it might not initially run for me) since it appeared solid & in good shape & it included a custom-built small trailer it was mounted on. The one odd thing was that it had a "MEP-002a instrument control box" mounted on it showing 2800 hrs. (so no idea if that was a used box or new box with zero hrs. on Hobbs meter? Thats not counting X hours on original MEP-003a box's Hobbs meter. I figured that the original MEP-003a console box on it, somewhere along the line, needed replacing (the owner didn't even know his unit was a 10kw unit as he had it advertised as 5kw thinking it was a 5kw MEP-002a unit due to the MEP-002a placard on control box ). Looking at the pictures in ad I could see it was clearly a MEP-003a unit. However, I have no idea how many actual hours it had accumulated. Anyway, I decided to take a chance & purchased & put it on my car hauler trailer & took it home.
After getting home I performed a more detailed visual inspection & everything checked out to my close inspection except to having one bad glow plug lead broken off which I would replace later & I noticed quite a bit of shiny carbon build up inside the 2 exhaust pipe outlets (appeared to be about 1/8th inch). I took off the original yucky fuel tank & put a shiny new "never used" MEP-002a smaller fuel tank on it & filled about 1/2 full of diesel just for an eventual test run. Before even attempting a start I completely serviced the entire fuel filtering system. Water separator was a mess with a layer of gunky fuel inside. Though as I went on to the other fuel filters it got better with the last filter nearest IJ pump looking like it had decent fuel in it. I thoroughly cleaned (used some Acetone to cut the gunk) and replaced all fuel filters checked oil level. Before I started it, I opened the control box and cleaned & worked all the switches with DeOxit Gold contact cleaner. I then did a first start attempt & it came roaring to life! Initially the stone-cold engine blew a bit of white smoke upon start up until it cleared out & was running steady but with some blue smoke that eventually dissipated as it came up to operating temp for the most part. I powered a light off the convenience outlet & it was producing electricity.
Now for the looming issue: I then proceeded to do an initial 5kw load test to check out electrical AC power output. It pulled 5kw nicely (still had the blue smoke on start-up) so I got engine up to temperature & ran it for ~15 minutes so I could do an oil change. I drained oil it looked pretty bad like it hadn't been changed for a long while. So, I decide to put in some Shell 15/40 oil I had on hand just to do another run up to temp & flush oil again. Everything was running great under another 5-kw load for ~15 minutes so I dropped the load and with no load with me just about ready to shut it down it suddenly took off as in run-away diesel engine! Started revving up blowing black smoke out the exhausts as I was scrambling to shut it down by turning it off. It was not shutting down very quickly as my heart was racing wondering if I was going to see pistons coming out the top of engine! I then pulled the emergency shut off switch & it slowly shut down. All in all, since I was near the control box it maybe ran 10-15 seconds in run-away mode blowing black smoke. I inspected engine let it cool down for a few hours and ran it again & nothing happened ran just fine for over half an hour under varying 5kw & below loads. Not wanting to push my luck I called it a day!
So, the next day I decided to go ahead & change oil & filter & put in some Delvac Syn 15/40 oil & new filter for its final oil service with some of the HotShot oil additive to help clean any buildup that might be causing the blue smoke on start-up (stuck rings, carboned cylinders, etc). I ran it unloaded & on start-up it again blew some blue smoke which dissipated mostly after it warmed up & it ran great with very little noticeable smoke other than typical diesel exhaust. I then decided to run it with my 10-kw load tester (mobile Comfort Zone Garage Heater). Worked it up to the 10kw load & it performed nicely. Did several cycles of no load and partial load to full 10 kw load & it passed the test over the course of about 1 hour . Decided to call it good and let it idle down to cool off a bit before doing a shut down. As I walked up to Control Box with no AC load on it engine started another runaway event racing engine blowing black smoke, I quickly pulled the emergency shut down panel breaker & it slowly shut down. I raised the engine cowling cover above the the fuel filter side & noticed that the valve cover nearest the Control box appeared hot & smoking a bit. Hmmm, not being familiar with run-away diesel engines where do I start with troubleshooting? What would cause this type of air-cooled engine to take off & rev up faster & faster until it begins to blow black smoke?
My thoughts are:
1. Bad injector(s) as in sticking, or pop off pressure needing calibration, or replacement? I think I might have a new injector or part of one in my spare parts stash...
2. Perhaps blue smoke on start-up is a sign of low compression (unknown hrs on engine) perhaps with hot oil blow by acting as additional unmetered fuel?
3. ???
First some background info...sorry a bit long bear with me... there is a critical mystery issue: The MEP-003a I located off Craigslist hadn't been run for 4 years since it was last used during a long-extended power outage by the owner. Owner said it had been kept under cover since then & it had not been started since & had dead batteries. I took 2 charged batteries with me intending to test start it but when I looked in the fuel tank I decided not to as fuel looked bad... a bit cloudy & inside tank was heavily rusted appearing to have accumulated humidity/water in fuel system (casualty of Oregon high humidity wet winters). I chose not to test run it for fear of passing bad fuel further towards injection pump & injectors.
Anyway, my initial visual inspection of this unit told me it was worth more than the asking price (even if by chance it might not initially run for me) since it appeared solid & in good shape & it included a custom-built small trailer it was mounted on. The one odd thing was that it had a "MEP-002a instrument control box" mounted on it showing 2800 hrs. (so no idea if that was a used box or new box with zero hrs. on Hobbs meter? Thats not counting X hours on original MEP-003a box's Hobbs meter. I figured that the original MEP-003a console box on it, somewhere along the line, needed replacing (the owner didn't even know his unit was a 10kw unit as he had it advertised as 5kw thinking it was a 5kw MEP-002a unit due to the MEP-002a placard on control box ). Looking at the pictures in ad I could see it was clearly a MEP-003a unit. However, I have no idea how many actual hours it had accumulated. Anyway, I decided to take a chance & purchased & put it on my car hauler trailer & took it home.
After getting home I performed a more detailed visual inspection & everything checked out to my close inspection except to having one bad glow plug lead broken off which I would replace later & I noticed quite a bit of shiny carbon build up inside the 2 exhaust pipe outlets (appeared to be about 1/8th inch). I took off the original yucky fuel tank & put a shiny new "never used" MEP-002a smaller fuel tank on it & filled about 1/2 full of diesel just for an eventual test run. Before even attempting a start I completely serviced the entire fuel filtering system. Water separator was a mess with a layer of gunky fuel inside. Though as I went on to the other fuel filters it got better with the last filter nearest IJ pump looking like it had decent fuel in it. I thoroughly cleaned (used some Acetone to cut the gunk) and replaced all fuel filters checked oil level. Before I started it, I opened the control box and cleaned & worked all the switches with DeOxit Gold contact cleaner. I then did a first start attempt & it came roaring to life! Initially the stone-cold engine blew a bit of white smoke upon start up until it cleared out & was running steady but with some blue smoke that eventually dissipated as it came up to operating temp for the most part. I powered a light off the convenience outlet & it was producing electricity.
Now for the looming issue: I then proceeded to do an initial 5kw load test to check out electrical AC power output. It pulled 5kw nicely (still had the blue smoke on start-up) so I got engine up to temperature & ran it for ~15 minutes so I could do an oil change. I drained oil it looked pretty bad like it hadn't been changed for a long while. So, I decide to put in some Shell 15/40 oil I had on hand just to do another run up to temp & flush oil again. Everything was running great under another 5-kw load for ~15 minutes so I dropped the load and with no load with me just about ready to shut it down it suddenly took off as in run-away diesel engine! Started revving up blowing black smoke out the exhausts as I was scrambling to shut it down by turning it off. It was not shutting down very quickly as my heart was racing wondering if I was going to see pistons coming out the top of engine! I then pulled the emergency shut off switch & it slowly shut down. All in all, since I was near the control box it maybe ran 10-15 seconds in run-away mode blowing black smoke. I inspected engine let it cool down for a few hours and ran it again & nothing happened ran just fine for over half an hour under varying 5kw & below loads. Not wanting to push my luck I called it a day!
So, the next day I decided to go ahead & change oil & filter & put in some Delvac Syn 15/40 oil & new filter for its final oil service with some of the HotShot oil additive to help clean any buildup that might be causing the blue smoke on start-up (stuck rings, carboned cylinders, etc). I ran it unloaded & on start-up it again blew some blue smoke which dissipated mostly after it warmed up & it ran great with very little noticeable smoke other than typical diesel exhaust. I then decided to run it with my 10-kw load tester (mobile Comfort Zone Garage Heater). Worked it up to the 10kw load & it performed nicely. Did several cycles of no load and partial load to full 10 kw load & it passed the test over the course of about 1 hour . Decided to call it good and let it idle down to cool off a bit before doing a shut down. As I walked up to Control Box with no AC load on it engine started another runaway event racing engine blowing black smoke, I quickly pulled the emergency shut down panel breaker & it slowly shut down. I raised the engine cowling cover above the the fuel filter side & noticed that the valve cover nearest the Control box appeared hot & smoking a bit. Hmmm, not being familiar with run-away diesel engines where do I start with troubleshooting? What would cause this type of air-cooled engine to take off & rev up faster & faster until it begins to blow black smoke?
My thoughts are:
1. Bad injector(s) as in sticking, or pop off pressure needing calibration, or replacement? I think I might have a new injector or part of one in my spare parts stash...
2. Perhaps blue smoke on start-up is a sign of low compression (unknown hrs on engine) perhaps with hot oil blow by acting as additional unmetered fuel?
3. ???