jim rosenthal
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2005
- Messages
- 11,050
- Hatteras Model
- 36' CONVERTIBLE-Series I (1969 -1977)
We just had a windstorm here in MD, and our power was out for four days. Some houses and communities are STILL out.
A few years ago, I installed a NL 16kW industrial genset; it will easily run all the loads I need inc the AC in the summer. The only problem I've had with it is that it always loses prime- I have to prime it by pumping the outboard style bulb on the fuel supply line. The fuel filter is a Fleetguard that I got from Seaboard Marine. I've never been able to figure out how to get it to hold prime. Once primed, it starts up and runs fine. Although it DID shut off once early yesterday am while I was asleep- and started up promptly again when I reprimed it manually.
With 128 hours on her now, an oil change and all the filters are due, so later this week I'm going to do that (especially as we have snow in the forecast AGAIN) but any suggestions as to what to look at to fix the problem would be useful. I think there might be a small air leak somewhere in the incoming fuel line that lets prime leak back down into the tank. The generator runs off an eighty-gallon tank that it sits on top of.
We have a very unreliable electric supply company here, BG&E, and having this generator set has saved me a great deal of aggravation in the last few years. We installed it and got the final inspection off a day or two before Hurricane Sandy, and it's been quite useful ever since.
A few years ago, I installed a NL 16kW industrial genset; it will easily run all the loads I need inc the AC in the summer. The only problem I've had with it is that it always loses prime- I have to prime it by pumping the outboard style bulb on the fuel supply line. The fuel filter is a Fleetguard that I got from Seaboard Marine. I've never been able to figure out how to get it to hold prime. Once primed, it starts up and runs fine. Although it DID shut off once early yesterday am while I was asleep- and started up promptly again when I reprimed it manually.
With 128 hours on her now, an oil change and all the filters are due, so later this week I'm going to do that (especially as we have snow in the forecast AGAIN) but any suggestions as to what to look at to fix the problem would be useful. I think there might be a small air leak somewhere in the incoming fuel line that lets prime leak back down into the tank. The generator runs off an eighty-gallon tank that it sits on top of.
We have a very unreliable electric supply company here, BG&E, and having this generator set has saved me a great deal of aggravation in the last few years. We installed it and got the final inspection off a day or two before Hurricane Sandy, and it's been quite useful ever since.