daugen
Epic Contributor
I was also going to comment on the Detroit. My dad ran lots on the sawmill and farm when I was growing up. The sawmill had a 6V-71 and a Silver 92. When I was a lumber piler and you heard them grunting you know that a mess of heavy planks were headed your way to pile.
A Silver 6-92 or 8-92? They took the latter out to 750hp in "high performance" marine applications and you were lucky to get 2000 hours out of them. If that was an 8 cylinder, that was a big saw! 6-92s from memory went out to 550hp, but never in industrial applications, always used continuous ratings. And then came DDEC...
One would think a backup generator would always use a continuous rated engine. Can't build them for a low price though.