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#141
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On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. |
#142
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wrote:
On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. |
#143
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posted to rec.boats
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On 10/7/2018 12:35 AM, Bill wrote:
wrote: On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. That's true. All the interconnect cable does is synchronize each generator's output so they are in phase. |
#145
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 07:34:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:35 AM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. That's true. All the interconnect cable does is synchronize each generator's output so they are in phase. I thought they could also be phased in series but I may be wrong. It never interested me enough to pursue. |
#146
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On 10/7/2018 12:45 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 07:34:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:35 AM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. That's true. All the interconnect cable does is synchronize each generator's output so they are in phase. I thought they could also be phased in series but I may be wrong. It never interested me enough to pursue. Maybe there are some that can generate 240v with a centertap to neutral when slaved together but the Honda ... at least the ones I am familiar with don't. Just doubles the available amps at 120 v. |
#147
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On Sunday, 7 October 2018 16:26:54 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 10/7/2018 12:45 PM, wrote: On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 07:34:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:35 AM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. That's true. All the interconnect cable does is synchronize each generator's output so they are in phase. I thought they could also be phased in series but I may be wrong. It never interested me enough to pursue. Maybe there are some that can generate 240v with a centertap to neutral when slaved together but the Honda ... at least the ones I am familiar with don't. Just doubles the available amps at 120 v. When I bought my EU 2000i in January, I had the choice of the regular model with the two 120v outlets or the 'Companion' model that had one 120v outlet and a way to hook two up together. I believe there was a 240v option. Now on the Honda site I see they beefed these models up a bit to Eu2200i and the EU2000i Companion...at the same price as the older 2000 models. https://powerequipment.honda.ca/gene...tweight-series |
#148
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On 10/7/2018 4:05 PM, True North wrote:
On Sunday, 7 October 2018 16:26:54 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:45 PM, wrote: On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 07:34:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:35 AM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. That's true. All the interconnect cable does is synchronize each generator's output so they are in phase. I thought they could also be phased in series but I may be wrong. It never interested me enough to pursue. Maybe there are some that can generate 240v with a centertap to neutral when slaved together but the Honda ... at least the ones I am familiar with don't. Just doubles the available amps at 120 v. When I bought my EU 2000i in January, I had the choice of the regular model with the two 120v outlets or the 'Companion' model that had one 120v outlet and a way to hook two up together. I believe there was a 240v option. Now on the Honda site I see they beefed these models up a bit to Eu2200i and the EU2000i Companion...at the same price as the older 2000 models. https://powerequipment.honda.ca/gene...tweight-series I've searched but I still don't see a 240 volt output version. There is a lot of discussion if two "companion" eu2000i's could be set up for 240 volt (series) but the experts and Honda reps all say no. There's a way you could do it .... have the generator feed a 1:2 step up transformer with a center tapped secondary (for the common neutral) but the current capacity for each leg would be greatly diminished. Not really feasible. Circuit would look like this. Note that the two output legs are 180 degrees out of phase: http://funkyimg.com/i/2LU7E.jpg |
#149
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On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 13:05:00 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote:
On Sunday, 7 October 2018 16:26:54 UTC-3, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:45 PM, wrote: On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 07:34:39 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/7/2018 12:35 AM, Bill wrote: wrote: On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 15:50:51 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 10/6/2018 1:27 PM, wrote: I agree, inverters are a far more elegant design but for the once a decade use I am looking at, I am not sure I want to pay for a 5.5kw inverter generator. If I didn't have a deal I could not refuse, I wouldn't even have this one ($300 new in the box) I did play with the engine speed and I could get the voltage up a little but the frequency seemed to increase faster than the voltage so I went back to getting a steady 60 hz. There are a bunch of holes in the bracket that the governor spring hangs on so you have a lot of options. I ended up being the next hole up from the one it was shipped at, adjusting speed/frequency to a full load and that is a minor change. (~59.8hz - 60) I've noticed that there are now several manufacturers offering inverter types. Back when I bought mine I think Honda was the only game in town and they only had three sizes in terms of power ... 1kw, 2kw and 3kw, all with 120 volt outputs only. Now you can get them much bigger in capacity and they offer 240v outputs in addition to the 120v. I was just looking at a 5kw (6.5Kw peak) made by Briggs and Stratton that costs about what a Honda eu2200i goes for. Since the stuff I am worried about is mostly 240v, (pumping water) those little Hondas had little attraction for me. I understand that later you could get two and make a 240 with the right kit but that gave me two gas engines to keep running. Maybe if I actually thought I needed a better generator I would look at a bigger 240v inverter but since mine seemed to be running hard just to keep up with the load, I was not sure how much I would save. I did consider metering the generator output, since I have a couple of utility meters on the shelf but I wasn't sure how much I really needed to know. I did put this into the system so I can hook up a clamp easily. http://gfretwell.com/electrical/Gene...connection.jpg I have some CTs in my pile of junk and a few panel meters that would be fairly easy to hook up but again, I may not have another outage that lasts long enough to care. Right after the storm I was ready to go with a box, the meters the CTs and the necessary connectors but I quickly lost interest. I am not even sure where I would put it. In the garage where it is easy to install, is not convenient to read. I guess I do have enough wire in pipe around here to put the meters themselves just about anywhere. Never dig a hole without dropping a lot of pipe in it, that's my motto ;-) When I put in the service feeder from the garage to the house, I dropped in 2 extra raceways. I think the two generator connector kit just gave more amps, not more voltage. You could run your RV with a 30 amp plug. That's true. All the interconnect cable does is synchronize each generator's output so they are in phase. I thought they could also be phased in series but I may be wrong. It never interested me enough to pursue. Maybe there are some that can generate 240v with a centertap to neutral when slaved together but the Honda ... at least the ones I am familiar with don't. Just doubles the available amps at 120 v. When I bought my EU 2000i in January, I had the choice of the regular model with the two 120v outlets or the 'Companion' model that had one 120v outlet and a way to hook two up together. I believe there was a 240v option. Now on the Honda site I see they beefed these models up a bit to Eu2200i and the EU2000i Companion...at the same price as the older 2000 models. https://powerequipment.honda.ca/gene...tweight-series There is no 240 volt option. Adding the 2200i Companion provides 30 amps at 120 volts. |
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