โMar-02-2005 06:20 AM
professor95 wrote:
EDIT ADDED 45/5/2013- When this thread started in March of 2005, I never expected to see it survive this long or amass the quantity of information that has been shared here.
In the eight year run of this thread we have amassed almost 10,000 postings and surpassed a million views. This creates somewhat of a dilemma for anyone who has just discovered the forum.
Since the amount of information is virtually overwhelming, I suggest you set your preferences for this thread to read "newest first" and then begin to page backwards.
What you will find in these pages is a wealth of info on virtually any make or model of Chinese manufactured synchronous (non-inverter) generator in the 3,000 watt performance class. Info will include how to rewire series coils to parallel to obtain maximum wattage from a single 120 volt outlet. Tips on further reducing sound levels, how to care for these generators, which ones are "RV ready" and provide the best overall performance for the dollar invested. Which companies NOT to deal with, where the best prices are, how to safely wire the generator into a home or RV, how to check your RV for electrical faults, sources for generator accessories, which 20/30 adapters are safe to use and which are not. How to convert a gasoline generator to propane or NG. This is only the beginning. The forum has a life of its own with the focus sub-topic switching frequently. Still, the main topic of utilizing the amazing, inexpensive Chinese gensets is always there. The amount of creativity and innovation presented in these pages is indicative of the talents shared in the diverse backgrounds of the folks who make up our combined RV community.
Many of the original brands and models of Chinese gensets mentioned in the introduction and early pages of the thread have since disappeared. New EPA and CARB emissions requirements, company bonds assuring the emissions warranty will be honored even if the company goes out of business, and fierce competition in the industry have changed the playing field. Champion Power Equipment has become the apparent "trophy team" providing an ever expanding retail outlet, an ample parts supply, a strong warranty and excellent customer service. CPE has continued to improve their product and now offers a new model (#46538) with exclusive convenience, safety and performance features aimed at the RV market. Big names like Cummins/Onan, Honda and Generac all now have Chinese built open frame synchronous gensets available. Ironically, the prices often found on these gensets has not significantly changed during the past eight years - even with the devaluation of the American Dollar and new EPA/CARB requirements.
I also encourage you to use the search function and even the advanced search options to find information. Key works such as "rewiring", "PowerPro", "Champion", "Onan Homesite", "Duropower", "ETQ", "Jiung Dong or JD", "Tractor Supply", "Costco", "Lowe's" and "Home Depot" are all examples of keywords that will give you specific information on different models being sold by retailers today.
Or, you can fill your glass with your favorite beverage (keep more close by - maybe some munchies as well :D, sit back at your computer, tell your wife (or significant other) that you will see her in the morning and spend the next 10 or so hours reading through the postings.
No one on the forum gets mad if you ask a question that is a repeat. Please do not hesitate to post to the forum. All questions are considered important and those active on the forum will do their best to respond with a valid answer.
Also note we are not out to knock the Honda, Yamaha, Kipor or other brands of high end digital gensets. We recognize the quality of these products and their suitability for quite, efficient RV use. But, there is a flood of reliable, inexpensive and comparatively lower cost gensets coming out of China that are excellent alternative choices for the RVer wanting power to run an air conditioner, microwave, etc. without excessive noise or breaking the budget.
Oh, one last thing. The folks on this forum are true gentlemen. We do not flame one another or the product discussed - period. Ugly contributors usually have their comments and remarks ignored by our masses. It is not a forum to start arguments to obtain a clear win. We do disagree on many issues, but we have all agreed to do that in a respectable manner.
We now have the introduction of more and more inverter gensets. There is a rather extensive thread named "The Official Unofficial Champion 2000i Generator" on this forum. Today, I added info on the new Champion 3100i inverter genset. Discussion on this product may get moved to its own thread at a later date.
Many have looked upon this thread with distain saying Chinese is cheap and doomed to failure. I remember saying exactly the same thing about Japanese products a few decades back. But, over the past eight years the track record for Chinese built generators has shown otherwise.
Please, join us in a fascinating journey down the Chinese built genset road of knowledge.
This is the question I posted that got it all started back in March 2005.......
Randy
For a little over a month now, I have been somewhat intrigued by the availability of a 3000 watt, 6.5 HP generator at Pep Boys and Northern Tool for under $300.00. The engine on this generator looks identical to a Honda 6.5 HP OHV engine. Knowing that the Chinese have become very adept at โcloningโ reputable technologies from other manufacturers, I was not surprised at the similarities. Neither store could give me any information on the generator nor did they have a โrunningโ display model.
I have done a little research. This is what I have discovered:
Many of these generators are imported by ELIM International (www.eliminternational.com) out of Buffalo, New York from Jiung Manufacturing in China. (The unit at Northern is identical but carries the JIUNG name.)
The engines are indeed a Chinese knockoff of the popular 6.5 HP 196cc Honda Engine. โSupposedlyโ Honda has licensed the engine technology to the Chinese manufacturer of the product.
The Chinese company that makes the ELM3000 generators is a rather large, diverse, long-standing company with a reputation for โabove average qualityโ Chinese made products (Jiung Manufacturing). There are many more Chinese companies making almost identical gensets.
The generators at PepBoys do have a six month limited warranty. But, it is only on the engine (not the generator) and requires paying for shipping to and from Buffalo. Probably not a very practical thing to do if you have warranty issues.
ELIM does supply replacement parts (a PDF parts manual is available on the ELIM web site). No prices are given for replacement parts nor is there an โavailability listingโ.
The generator head itself is a brushless design. The only really significant wear parts in the generator are the bearings โ most likely universally available.
The published dB rating is 67 at 23 feet. This is โreasonablyโ quite for a generator of this size as most comparabl.... The 67 dB rating is the same as Honda gives their 3000 watt CycloInverter with a โlook alikeโ eng...
โJun-30-2007 08:17 PM
โJun-30-2007 07:39 PM
โJun-30-2007 06:39 PM
yerlizard wrote:
John, I can't that link to go anywhere, it cannot display it.
is there another link?
thanks,
Scott
โJun-30-2007 05:36 PM
โJun-30-2007 02:15 PM
โJun-30-2007 01:09 PM
AZJIM1 wrote:
How many of you are running hour meters on your gensets? I have been thinking of adding one to my new Champion (while it is still new) and have seen TinyTachs and SenDec models . . . anybody have any experience with these?
โJun-30-2007 12:46 PM
MrWizard wrote:
neutral on these generators is NOT bonded to grd, and that is the way it is supposed to be ,'NOT bonded" is corect
. . .
there are several other threads devoted to that topic
โJun-30-2007 12:41 PM
AZJIM1 wrote:
How many of you are running hour meters on your gensets? I have been thinking of adding one to my new Champion (while it is still new) and have seen TinyTachs and SenDec models . . . anybody have any experience with these?
โJun-30-2007 11:39 AM
โJun-30-2007 11:38 AM
โJun-30-2007 11:03 AM
โJun-30-2007 06:02 AM
โJun-30-2007 02:17 AM
MrWizard wrote:
if its 2800 watts, thats 1400 watts per each duplex or 11.6 amps
my memory says 1 hp is 740 watts, meaning your motor can do that much work, but not the specifics of how much input power it needs, it handle your saw, but your 2hp compressor needs a min 1480 running watts, with out power factor loss, and the start up load which could spike as high as 60 amps for a few milliseconds
what is rating on the spec plate and what is the power factor, of your SAW & compressor
and you are bogging the genny on the compressor because, you are trying to draw more power from the winding, kind of like locking one drive wheel of your car in vise then trying to drive away
not because the gas engine won't handle it.. now granted, with a full load of air on the compressor head the generator might not handle it even in parallel mode, but this is because of the surge current needed to start the compressor
6.5 hp = over 4000 watts out put from the gas engine,
โJun-29-2007 09:50 PM
โJun-29-2007 09:01 PM
2003Summit wrote:
After reading all the wonderful, informative info on this thread I went out and confidently bought a 2800/4000W Champion from my local Costco Canada; having researched it carefully on this form. It seams to be the same one as I see in all of your pictures.
I was excited about re-wiring for maximum output on 120VAC but I think I have run into a major stumbling block. I don't think this unit can be re-wired. I will start from the beginning, hopefully someone has run in to this and has a work around. If not, then the Canadian versions are defiantly different and not possible to re-wire.
I took the cover off the generator head. The first thing I noticed was that neutral was bonded to ground inside the head with a short jumper wire โ this was expected from the other posts and the sicker on the frame โie. Warning: neutral bonded to frameโ. I removed it, an ohm meter test confirmed no more link to ground.
Now, the coloring of the wires is a bit different from most of the posts. I have a red, black, and white wire going to the panel. That makes sense. My coil wires are as follows: red; blue; blue; black. The red coil wire is on a binding post with the red wire going to the panel, both blue coil wires are on the same binding post along with the white which goes to the panel, and the black coil wire on a post with the black to the panel. I also noted the red and black wire go together into one sleeve, and the two blues go together into another sleeve as they go into the windings. Because my wiring colors are different than the posts I have seen, I decided to do some careful testing to make sure I knew what was what.
I separated out (isolated) all four coil wires, one on each of the four binding posts and disconnected the panel wires completely for testing. I then measured resistance with a high quality digital multi meter. I got the following: Red to blue: 1 ohm, blue to blue: Zero ohm, blue to red: 1 ohm, red to black: 2 ohm. Iโm already worried. From every post and schematic I have seen there should be no connection between the two coils. But I have very low resistance measured between each and every coil wire! Not good.
Well, hoping this could not be true I decided to start the gen up and place a moderate load on the various wires while measuring the voltage. If the coils where indeed separate, there shouldnโt be any way to support a load by connecting to only one pole of each coil and no way to get 220 without the coils linked. So I hooked up a 3A 120VAC sander (my test load) along with my DMM to measure voltage with two test leads. I can support the 3A load from red to *either* blue, and black to *either* blue. Meter shows 120V, sander starts strong and runs strong, the gen engine makes the same small grunt on each connection. I also briefly tested the sander from black to red, 220V, sander runs way too fast, gen makes a much bigger grunt. I get no sander operation on blue to blue. All of this was done with each of the four coil wires isolated from one-another.
This is not good, blue and blue seam obviously wired together โinsideโ the coil windings. Both my resistance test and load tests support this. This seams to indicate either a single coil with a center tap or the coils are connected in series somewhere *in* the windings. I looked very closely and I can see no way to change this with out splitting the gen open and re-wiring the actual windings โ probably not a worth while project if even possible. I decided I should post on here and see if anyone has any ideas before I get too depressed about it; and if this all ends up being true to warn others about the Canadian version that Costco sells or maybe the Canadian verion peroid.
Here are some pics:
The gen:
Before re-wiring (note, ignore the loose brown wire, I was adding this wire to link up the panel, it is not stock):
The way it was when I was conducting my tests. Pannel wires are removed for testing, each of the four coil wires are issolated, that is they are each sitting alone on each of the four binding posts.
If you need any more info, please ask.
Hopefully someone has a work around or idea on this. If anyone else has a Canadian verision and wouldn't mind checking this; it could be usefull.
Thank you to all the tireless people that read and post on this thread.