Good job Mike.
Jut as an FYI, the blue “regulator” device is not really to regulate the LP pressure. That is being handled by the regulator at your LP cylinders. It should be adjusted to maintain about 11” of water column pressure, and I try to adjust it while it’s regulating one of its larger loads.
There are two safety items that every Propane or natural gas powered engine needs. One is a positive fuel cut or shutoff solenoid that is held open electrically. If power to the solenoid fails, it closes. It appears the blue device at the end of the LP hose functions as the fuel cut solenoid. It also appears to have a diaphragm as part of it, which is probably to sense the LP pressure coming from the cylinder. I suspect it needs to sense a minimum amount of pressure on both the tank side and the generator side (In other words, no leaks) before it allows the solenoid to remain open.
The second item is a device that only allows the fuel to flow into the intake manifold while it’s running. That device is usually referred to as a “zero governor” or a “demand regulator”. It’s strictly an on/off device that only opens when certain preconditions exist. In the case of your generator, the controller must sense that the engine crankshaft is rotating.
On many LP powered generators, sensing that the engine is running is purely mechanical, by means of a demand regulator that can sense vacuum in the engine intake manifold. Yours appears to be controlling the demand regulator electrically. The schematic for your generator shows a second fuel solenoid under the main covers close to the engine, and I suspect that functions as the demand regulator, that only opens when crankshaft rotation is sensed.
:):)
2001 Lance 1121 on a 2016 F450 ‘Scuse me while I whinge.
And for all you Scooby-Doo and Yosemite Sam types………..Let’s Go Brandon!!!