โFeb-28-2018 05:51 AM
โMar-02-2018 07:14 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:CVD wrote:
Interesting discussion - is "adjusting" the generator commonly needed? Of course I change the gen oil and air filter, but haven't known of other needed maintenance.
You can only tell if it is needed by using a meter to monitor it. I'm guessing that every generator is different. I keep my meter plugged in at all times so that when the generator is running, I can tell at a glance if everything is OK.
Sort of like checking shore power to insure that the voltage is not too low or too high. The same meter will do that also.
โMar-02-2018 06:58 AM
CVD wrote:
Interesting discussion - is "adjusting" the generator commonly needed? Of course I change the gen oil and air filter, but haven't known of other needed maintenance.
โMar-02-2018 06:52 AM
โMar-02-2018 04:30 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:
That little cheap Kill-A-Watt meter will tell you exactly what your frequency is.
Yes it will... When one is available. ๐
Yes, it is hard to find a Home Depot, Lowes, Amazon, etc. Why guess at what the problem is when for $20 you can find out exactly?
How about because the last time I used a microwave to adjust a generator I was 15 miles back in the woods on hiking trip and helped the Forest Service spotter at a fire watch tower get her generator running closer to specs? I don't carry a Kill-A-Watt in my hiking pack, and I wasn't about to run out and get one. ๐
Even where we are right now, it's about 50 miles to the nearest town with a store likely to carry the meter if I didn't have one with me. Adjusting a generator without a volt/freq meter at hand is only intended as an interim fix until the proper test equipment is on hand to make the final adjustments. Kind of like back in the old days when we gapped points and plugs with a cardboard matchbook cover. One thickness for points, two for plugs. Close enough to get you home...
I understand what you are saying but I would not suggest that the OP start adjusting his generator without finding out first if that is the problem. Of course I am assuming that he is not out in the middle of nowhere. He may be messing with a generator, that is working fine and well within specs, that was not the problem. Playing with the adjustments may damage other equipment before there is an opportunity to get the generator properly calibrated. From his post, it didn't appear to be an emergency situation.
โMar-02-2018 04:05 AM
Dutch_12078 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:
That little cheap Kill-A-Watt meter will tell you exactly what your frequency is.
Yes it will... When one is available. ๐
Yes, it is hard to find a Home Depot, Lowes, Amazon, etc. Why guess at what the problem is when for $20 you can find out exactly?
How about because the last time I used a microwave to adjust a generator I was 15 miles back in the woods on hiking trip and helped the Forest Service spotter at a fire watch tower get her generator running closer to specs? I don't carry a Kill-A-Watt in my hiking pack, and I wasn't about to run out and get one. ๐
Even where we are right now, it's about 50 miles to the nearest town with a store likely to carry the meter if I didn't have one with me. Adjusting a generator without a volt/freq meter at hand is only intended as an interim fix until the proper test equipment is on hand to make the final adjustments. Kind of like back in the old days when we gapped points and plugs with a cardboard matchbook cover. One thickness for points, two for plugs. Close enough to get you home...
โMar-02-2018 03:43 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:Dutch_12078 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:
That little cheap Kill-A-Watt meter will tell you exactly what your frequency is.
Yes it will... When one is available. ๐
Yes, it is hard to find a Home Depot, Lowes, Amazon, etc. Why guess at what the problem is when for $20 you can find out exactly?
โMar-01-2018 02:36 PM
Dutch_12078 wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:
That little cheap Kill-A-Watt meter will tell you exactly what your frequency is.
Yes it will... When one is available. ๐
โMar-01-2018 02:22 PM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
That little cheap Kill-A-Watt meter will tell you exactly what your frequency is.
โMar-01-2018 06:43 AM
โMar-01-2018 06:12 AM
Dutch_12078 wrote:very educated answer.
I would say the OP's problem very strongly suggest the frequency is off a bit too far..
โMar-01-2018 06:10 AM
Dutch_12078 wrote:
Microwave ovens are quite frequency sensitive since the magnetron used in the US is designed to operate on 60 hertz with only a small variation allowed. The turntable turning, etc, with no heating, is a common problem when folks take a US microwave oven to a foreign country where 50 hertz is the standard. I would say the OP's problem vary strongly suggest the frequency is off a bit too far. I've used a microwave to test for frequency accuracy when tuning up a generator when my freq meter wasn't available. It's not a perfect test, but it's pretty close.
โFeb-28-2018 10:21 AM
โFeb-28-2018 10:21 AM
โFeb-28-2018 10:05 AM