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On Jun 24, 5:20 am, Ron Rosenfeld wrote:
... Ron, what peak starting current should I expect on a single-phase, 240V, 3/4h.p., running current=7.8A motor used to lift my hangar door? I want to rig up a genny to lift the door during a power failure. The gear train on the door is rigged so that all of the cables are slack (i.e. only motor inertial) when the motor starts. |
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![]() "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote A problem with small, inexpensive, gasoline fueled generators is that, unless you are religious about exercising them, they usually won't start when you need them. An exception to that rule is a Honda generator. I'm not a foreign car guy, or anything like that; quite the opposite. My dad had one that would sit for a couple of years, and it would start on the first or second pull, with fresh gas in the tank. It is amazing how many other uses come up, once you have a generator sitting around. -- Jim in NC |
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On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 01:05:26 -0400, "Morgans"
wrote: "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote A problem with small, inexpensive, gasoline fueled generators is that, unless you are religious about exercising them, they usually won't start when you need them. An exception to that rule is a Honda generator. I'm not a foreign car guy, or anything like that; quite the opposite. My dad had one that would sit for a couple of years, and it would start on the first or second pull, with fresh gas in the tank. It is amazing how many other uses come up, once you have a generator sitting around. Mine is 9500 watts continuous. It doesn't even have the option of a pull starter. I don't think I could pull it even if it did. I keep the tank full. When I shut it down I turn the gas off and let it dry out the carb. It's on wheels, but it'd take a truck to haul it so it could be called portable. OTOH it'd take three and preferably four men to put it in the truck. If it were in the shop I could do that with an engine hoist. I fire it up about every other month and let it run for about 10 minutes. In the winter I have to keep a small heat lamp on the battery. It'll run about 10 to 12 hours powering the whole house sans air conditioner (except for the little spare one stuck in the bedroom window) on 10 gallons. I had a little 4000 watt Coleman that used twice as much gas, but it was kinda portable and made a whole lot more noise. I purchased it new, *after* Y2K when there were lots of them available at half price and less. In the last 6 1/2 years I have well over 100 hours on it powering the house. Lots of power outages due to poor line maintenance and we are about 2 miles from the city limits and just over a mile from the substation. As for other uses, with help I some times pull it out of the generator shed and use it to power my 180 amp MIG welder. It's been a while but IIRC the engine doesn't even change pitch when welding. |
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On Wed, 27 Jun 2007 01:05:26 -0400, "Morgans"
wrote: "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote A problem with small, inexpensive, gasoline fueled generators is that, unless you are religious about exercising them, they usually won't start when you need them. An exception to that rule is a Honda generator. I'm not a foreign car guy, or anything like that; quite the opposite. My dad had one that would sit for a couple of years, and it would start on the first or second pull, with fresh gas in the tank. It is amazing how many other uses come up, once you have a generator sitting around. One problem is that frequently, after sitting around for a few years, there isn't fresh gas in the tank! (I should have been more specific as to the reasons). --ron |
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On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 07:20:40 -0400, Ron Rosenfeld
wrote: On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 13:49:59 -0700, "RST Engineering" wrote: I thought I had this compressor power thing down to a pretty good science until they started screwing around with "rated watts" and "peak power" and all that crap that makes their compressor look really good until you go to use it. Back when we were using "real" horsepower I used a figure of 750 (to make it easy to calculate, I believe 746 is the actual number) watts per horsepower and an efficiency factor of 85% so that a one horse motor would take 860 watts to do the actual work. But then you multiplied that times two for "starting" wattage for a couple of seconds to give 1725 watts under start and then times three for starting under some volume of air left in the compressor reservoir or about 2600 watts. That presses my 2200 watt continuous duty (2800 watts peak) fairly close to the load limit, but certainly gives a margin for error that seems reasonable. I happen to have a Sears 1HP compressor (1.5HP Peak). Mine has a nameplate rating of 10.5A @ 120V. I could not see/locate the nameplate on the motor itself, so I figured a 52.5A startup surge (5X). My inverter has a 78A peak capacity (46A continuous) so I figured things would work -- and they have. Your 2800W peak generator translates to 23.3A at 120VAC. If you have the same Sears compressor as I do, I'm not surprised that the generator will have a problem starting it. I just measured my little suitcase compressor. It's a dry pump with a nameplate rating of 115V, 15A, 7.9cfm and 4cfm (presumably at 40 and 90psi). Running off an inverter - tank empty starting current 33.8A. Running current 11.6A. Normal starting current (after tank drops to about 80psi, 32.4A (reflects warmed up compressor I guess). Despite the startup current, this compressor runs fine off my $300 cheapie 3500W rated generator, which in reality is only good for about 2000W continuous. (inflated rating plus 4500' elevation) Wayne |
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