Good logic, skeets.
Why do people have sensitive electronics-failures using standard portable generators..??
Usually because they’ve bought too small a generator which struggles to maintain steady rpm..….Or…they fail to follow good operating practices that avoid subjecting the sensitive equp’t to fluctuations, such as:
Here’s the details of this particular rare failure-mode:
The actual generator within the package is comprised of a rotating armature spun inside an electromagnetic Field by the engine. When starting to spin, a “residual” magnetism of the pole-shoes of the Field initiates the magnetism of the Field. This “residual” is what maintains the “polarity” (N/S) magnetism essential to the process.
IF the residual magnetism is lost…for instance, if you let that generator sit for 5 years without running at all….the metal “shoes” which hold the Field windings…may lose their residual magnetism… and then will be unable to initiate any electromagnetic-force to begin the generating process.
Here’s the “fix”:
Take an ordinary electric drill-motor….(not a battery powered drill, but a genuine corded drill)… plug it into the receptacle of the portable generator while the portable is running….grab the drill-chuck with your hand and give it a sharp “spin” manually. (be certain you pulled/activated the trigger-switch on the drill when you do this.) The portable generator should immediately begin to produce AC current.
Why?
The small drill-motor is just another AC motor…and elect-motors and generators are merely mirror-images of each other. When you spin the drill motor you are being the engine and spinning the “generator” you’ve made of the little drill-motor….which sends current thru it’s power-cord directly into the portable-generator’s coils….. ”exciting” them… or “polarizing” them,….which then became self-sustaining.
Hint: Don’t try to hang-onto that little drill motor chuck very tightly…because it will immediately go to work when the portable generator instantly puts-out 120-VAC.
There’s another, ever RARER failure-mode that can occur with portable generators. The voltage output may disappear and the little drill-motor “fix” doesn’t work. Inside the “control-panel” of the portable generator you may find a small capacitor/condenser…. a little metal ”can” or cylinder…might be about the size of a D-cell flashlight battery…. and it may have failed. (This sort of thing might already be familiar to you when your home central air cond unit ….which has a larger capacitor the size of a shaving-cream-can….fan-motor/compressor-motor fails to start/run.)
The typical portable generator has a capacitor rated at about 25 uf (micro-farads) … and (less-importantly ) which can operate at up to 300+ volts. If that capacitor/condenser fails the portable generator may fail to excite/initiate….until you replace it with a good one.
This occurred to me on a camping-trip thru Jackson Hole. We were camping on BLM land and needed our generator as it was HOT and we wanted air-conditioning. No one in Jackson Hole had any idea what I was wanting…. until I found there was a water-well drilling service in town.
I pulled up to their maintenance shop and asked if they had any run/start pump-motor capacitors. Yep…they had a large selection…and they wanted an outrageous $60 for one that was ..close but not exactly correctly-rated…. theirs was 40 uf… but I bought it and installed it and the little generator made 128 volts for the rest fo that trip.
When I was able to get to a Whole Foods (Amazon Drop-Box) I ordered/received ($11) the correctly-rated 20-25uf capacitor…which fixed the little generator …puts out exactly 120 volts again. That was 4 years ago and still running fine.
Why do people have sensitive electronics-failures using standard portable generators..??
Usually because they’ve bought too small a generator which struggles to maintain steady rpm..….Or…they fail to follow good operating practices that avoid subjecting the sensitive equp’t to fluctuations, such as:
- Turn the switches off or unplug before starting or stopping your genset.
- Do not run out of fuel and let your genset run dry.
- Buy a quality genset.
- Make sure your genset is the right size and not too small.
- (Have some spinning reserve)
Here’s the details of this particular rare failure-mode:
The actual generator within the package is comprised of a rotating armature spun inside an electromagnetic Field by the engine. When starting to spin, a “residual” magnetism of the pole-shoes of the Field initiates the magnetism of the Field. This “residual” is what maintains the “polarity” (N/S) magnetism essential to the process.
IF the residual magnetism is lost…for instance, if you let that generator sit for 5 years without running at all….the metal “shoes” which hold the Field windings…may lose their residual magnetism… and then will be unable to initiate any electromagnetic-force to begin the generating process.
Here’s the “fix”:
Take an ordinary electric drill-motor….(not a battery powered drill, but a genuine corded drill)… plug it into the receptacle of the portable generator while the portable is running….grab the drill-chuck with your hand and give it a sharp “spin” manually. (be certain you pulled/activated the trigger-switch on the drill when you do this.) The portable generator should immediately begin to produce AC current.
Why?
The small drill-motor is just another AC motor…and elect-motors and generators are merely mirror-images of each other. When you spin the drill motor you are being the engine and spinning the “generator” you’ve made of the little drill-motor….which sends current thru it’s power-cord directly into the portable-generator’s coils….. ”exciting” them… or “polarizing” them,….which then became self-sustaining.
Hint: Don’t try to hang-onto that little drill motor chuck very tightly…because it will immediately go to work when the portable generator instantly puts-out 120-VAC.
There’s another, ever RARER failure-mode that can occur with portable generators. The voltage output may disappear and the little drill-motor “fix” doesn’t work. Inside the “control-panel” of the portable generator you may find a small capacitor/condenser…. a little metal ”can” or cylinder…might be about the size of a D-cell flashlight battery…. and it may have failed. (This sort of thing might already be familiar to you when your home central air cond unit ….which has a larger capacitor the size of a shaving-cream-can….fan-motor/compressor-motor fails to start/run.)
The typical portable generator has a capacitor rated at about 25 uf (micro-farads) … and (less-importantly ) which can operate at up to 300+ volts. If that capacitor/condenser fails the portable generator may fail to excite/initiate….until you replace it with a good one.
This occurred to me on a camping-trip thru Jackson Hole. We were camping on BLM land and needed our generator as it was HOT and we wanted air-conditioning. No one in Jackson Hole had any idea what I was wanting…. until I found there was a water-well drilling service in town.
I pulled up to their maintenance shop and asked if they had any run/start pump-motor capacitors. Yep…they had a large selection…and they wanted an outrageous $60 for one that was ..close but not exactly correctly-rated…. theirs was 40 uf… but I bought it and installed it and the little generator made 128 volts for the rest fo that trip.
When I was able to get to a Whole Foods (Amazon Drop-Box) I ordered/received ($11) the correctly-rated 20-25uf capacitor…which fixed the little generator …puts out exactly 120 volts again. That was 4 years ago and still running fine.
GEDIZA 25 uF 25 MFD ±5% 370/440V Run Round Capacitor for HEVAC, A/C for Condenser Straight Cool or AC Motor and Fan Starting or Heat Pump A/C, Pool Pumps. Model CBB65. Guaranteed to Last 5 Years: Amazon.com: Industrial & Scientific
GEDIZA 25 uF 25 MFD ±5% 370/440V Run Round Capacitor for HEVAC, A/C for Condenser Straight Cool or AC Motor and Fan Starting or Heat Pump A/C, Pool Pumps. Model CBB65. Guaranteed to Last 5 Years: Amazon.com: Industrial & Scientific
www.amazon.com
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