5030
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 26,997
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
All too complex for me. I just let both my Generac's adjust themselves internally. The both have electronic voltage and hertz controls.
One thing I never do is load them to the maximum output and after 15 years all has been good.
One thing I just did was I took the 20KW unit that runs the house and removed all the internals from the original steel cabinet and installed all the internals in a Generac supplied aluminum cabinet as the OEM steel cabinet was suffering from terminal corrosion. The new powder coated aluminum cabinet set me back 5 grand (special order from Generac) but 5 grand was cheap compared to a new 20KW unit. Retail on a new 20KW Generac is pushing 15 grand today. 5 versus 15 in my view was a no brainer.
I was pleasantly surprised that Generac made an aluminum refit cabinet but then a lot of them were sold with steel cabinets and I bet a ton of them are suffering from terminal corrosion. They should have never sold them with steel cabinets in the first place.
The instructions were a bit cryptic but I figured it out no issue. Generac supplied all the necessary hardware as well and even a cute 'Generac' decal I threw away.
First time I installed the unit on a pad filled with per gravel bordered with .40 retention 4x6 boards. This time I poured a 6" thick concrete pad with rebar in it and sat the new unit on top of the concrete. I set it so I didn't have to remove the grounding rod as Generac units are all floating ground and must have the chassis earthed. Hopefully I won't be around long enough to worry about it again.
The 35KW unit I have next to the shop that runs the shop and the outbuildings came with an aluminum enclosure sitting on top of a 150 gallon diesel tank I never use. I plumbed the diesel feed into my 500 gallon bulk tank and left the integral tank dry. After 15+ years of service, the JD Turbo diesel runs like a top with regular maintenance and never fails to pick up the load when the utility fails which is often out here. Same with the 20KW unit that feeds the house but that one is on propane. I have 3 500 gallon owned bottles in the side yard and we heat the house with it as well.
One thing I never do is load them to the maximum output and after 15 years all has been good.
One thing I just did was I took the 20KW unit that runs the house and removed all the internals from the original steel cabinet and installed all the internals in a Generac supplied aluminum cabinet as the OEM steel cabinet was suffering from terminal corrosion. The new powder coated aluminum cabinet set me back 5 grand (special order from Generac) but 5 grand was cheap compared to a new 20KW unit. Retail on a new 20KW Generac is pushing 15 grand today. 5 versus 15 in my view was a no brainer.
I was pleasantly surprised that Generac made an aluminum refit cabinet but then a lot of them were sold with steel cabinets and I bet a ton of them are suffering from terminal corrosion. They should have never sold them with steel cabinets in the first place.
The instructions were a bit cryptic but I figured it out no issue. Generac supplied all the necessary hardware as well and even a cute 'Generac' decal I threw away.
First time I installed the unit on a pad filled with per gravel bordered with .40 retention 4x6 boards. This time I poured a 6" thick concrete pad with rebar in it and sat the new unit on top of the concrete. I set it so I didn't have to remove the grounding rod as Generac units are all floating ground and must have the chassis earthed. Hopefully I won't be around long enough to worry about it again.
The 35KW unit I have next to the shop that runs the shop and the outbuildings came with an aluminum enclosure sitting on top of a 150 gallon diesel tank I never use. I plumbed the diesel feed into my 500 gallon bulk tank and left the integral tank dry. After 15+ years of service, the JD Turbo diesel runs like a top with regular maintenance and never fails to pick up the load when the utility fails which is often out here. Same with the 20KW unit that feeds the house but that one is on propane. I have 3 500 gallon owned bottles in the side yard and we heat the house with it as well.