What's the groups thoughts on gasoline/propane vs. diesel genset exercise loads? You need to get all the units hot for some period of time to burn off condensation but you don't have wet stacking issues with non-diesels.
DEWFPO
IMO,
all fuel types need to be exercised, with adequate loads. (Just covering my bases....).
Propane and natgas aren't likely to wash down cylinder walls. With the exception of the smallest units, diesel gens tend to be water-cooled. Water-cooling + high torque diesel + ultra-low load = good chances the engine will run cold....... esp. compared to air-cooled units. One advantage to a PTO powered generator is that the tractor lives multiple lives..... chances are pretty good the tractor will see heavy use/pulling doing something else, and gets exercised that way - a dedicated diesel gen only dances to one song.....
90 posted a while back concerning a small diesel gen he extensively rebuilt for a friend - it had been run long periods with virtually no load. Whether or not a diesel engine exhibits obvious
external symptoms, I feel they have the toughest time dealing with dramatic under-loading, compared to most other fuels.
But, I don't like running
any generator for really long periods with only very light loads. DC to AC inverters are relatively inexpensive today (and very quiet); I prefer to use batteries driving inverters to support light loads.
90 touched on another good point - small portable generators are often advertised and labeled with their
surge wattage rating, as opposed to
continuous-duty power. If it's not explicitly stated, I assume I'm looking at surge power rating, and de-rate accordingly.
Rgds, D.