How Generators Work, And How To Fix Them.

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FarmCraft101

FarmCraft101

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 1 000
@FarmCraft101
@FarmCraft101 Жыл бұрын
Generators are fascinating in how they work, but there are so many different variations and ways of doing things it's hard to do a comprehensive overview in a single video. They will certainly keep you on your toes! I hope you guys enjoy the video, and have an absolutely excellent weekend folks!!
@craigking391
@craigking391 Жыл бұрын
Learned a lot by watching this. Great work.
@Melicoy
@Melicoy Жыл бұрын
Should have sent it to james c
@TerryLawrence001
@TerryLawrence001 Жыл бұрын
Weren't those short white wires actually fusible links? I believe that wire could be directly on the stator winding and has the full current of the generator available. I have seen the fireworks when that wire gets it's insulation eaten. Big bright plasma flash!
@georgereiss998
@georgereiss998 Жыл бұрын
If you want your head to explode add a tertiary winding. That makes an amplidyne (sp). That makes crazy power and when I learned how they work I was told PFM.
@Vectrum0013
@Vectrum0013 Жыл бұрын
for more generator videos I recommend @SmallEngineMechanic
@jcondon1
@jcondon1 Жыл бұрын
Nice save and great video. Fantastic job with the illustrations and explaining how a brushed and brushless generator works.
@FarmCraft101
@FarmCraft101 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Jim! That's great to hear from somebody who really knows what they are talking about when it comes to generators. I feel like I know just enough to be dangerous! ;-)
@kd2eat
@kd2eat Жыл бұрын
@@FarmCraft101 As a fan of James' channel, I was hoping you had run into it. I really appreciated your diagrams of the brushed and brushless generators! I've watched James test those windings a million times and said to myself "One of these days, I need to understand that better". Your walk-through helped a lot! Glad the repair was fairly inexpensive for a nice beefy generator for your buddy!
@johnnybgoode6466
@johnnybgoode6466 Жыл бұрын
I watch both channels James and Jon - always a learning experience.
@TimPerfetto
@TimPerfetto Жыл бұрын
@@kd2eat My cat is very old and grumpy and refuses to eat his hair -- he also has loose bowel movements
@akhtarkh
@akhtarkh Жыл бұрын
​@@kd2eat James has never explained how well John has explained the working of a generator.
@bobjones-xc9fp
@bobjones-xc9fp Жыл бұрын
Career mechanic, you gave the best explanation, schematic, and diagrams I’ve ever seen. You should have called this episode “ come learn ac systems, dc systems, engine diagnosis, and plumbing in under an hour” . Big fan!
@mattyal9347
@mattyal9347 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Hid diagrams spoke volumes
@timothyboone5003
@timothyboone5003 Жыл бұрын
bob jones I couldn’t agree more. After seeing so many KZbin videos of people thinking they know more about whatever their subject is, than they really do. It nice to see one where the person has actual useful working knowledge of the subject. I’ll be exploring this man’s KZbin content. I hope he has more.
@pedroAnibal5021
@pedroAnibal5021 Жыл бұрын
Bobjones_xc9fp
@loganschalk2955
@loganschalk2955 Жыл бұрын
I'm right their with you. Mechanic and going to school for engineering, he explained ac/DC power plants and controls better than any book Ive read has. I've paid a lot of teachers to learn what he just gave for free in 10 minutes.
@bobmartin9518
@bobmartin9518 Жыл бұрын
I've worked on generators for years and your explanations are correct. Your troubleshooting is very good. Farmers fix it all.
@zncon
@zncon Жыл бұрын
Your teaching ability is simply amazing. Videos like this are what truly makes the internet great.
@DiHandley
@DiHandley Жыл бұрын
Everybody needs a friend like you John. That’s the reason I like your channel so much. I really enjoy the logic in your work. You might not exactly know how something works, but with persistence you’ll work it out. I wish you were my neighbour!
@robertalexander4092
@robertalexander4092 Жыл бұрын
I'm an electrical engineer covering generator controls along with other stuff for an offshore drilling company. Your explanation and troubleshooting for that stand-by gen were spot-on; same approach our guys use troubleshooting the big diesels offshore. =) The cool thing was seeing all the same principles duplicated in miniature. The 15kW stand-by wasn't that much different from one of our 7,000kW gens, except we pull exciter power from a PMG.
@jackpatteeuw9244
@jackpatteeuw9244 Жыл бұрын
Most under 10KW are brushed. The engine will probably wear out before the slip rings or brushes.
@mikefochtman7164
@mikefochtman7164 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. Worked on some old EMD stationary power (4000 kW). Basically railroad engines with the generator swapped out for AC power. Things were kept pre-lubed and went from standby to nearly full load in 10 seconds.
@MitchEllis-e4y
@MitchEllis-e4y Жыл бұрын
Nuke plant I worked at had 2 trans America Deleval/Cooper/Enterprise that were V24 4 stroke to memory. Had full temperature control if oil and coolant to have diesel and generator ready to go from full emergency start to full load about 10,000Kw in 10 seconds to memory. They were massive and had all sorts of pneumatic sensors for protection along with a pneumatic computer. The V12 tandem GM EMD 2 stroke was much simpler and louder but purred like a kitten. It had about 6,800kw to 7,200kw to memory. Been 20 plus years since I worked in either of them. The DELEVAL STARTED AS HUGE CARGO SHIP ENGINES that were built and certified for nuclear power emergency back up power. Both were air start with the Deleval injecting air into the cylinders and the EMD’s each having two robust air start motors driving their flywheels. You could tell which of the three diesels fire up by their sound. The EMD started really loud then quite down. The Deleval had two massive turbo chargers per engine while the EMD ALSO HAD TWO TURBO CHARGER PER V12 engine. All had oil sump, coolant heaters and circulating pumps with the turbos having a soak back or drip feed to their bearing for hot starts before the main engine driven oil pumps kicked in. The coolant electric circulating coolant pumps would also turn off when the engine drive coolant pumps came to speed and system pressure. Much of the test run protection in the Deleval would be bypassed by the pneumatic computer during an emergency run. It either ran or failed. I think the only protection that remained in the Deleval were the main crank and connecting rod temp sensors were lad melt type which would vent the air pressure holding the pneumatic computer in energency run when I tgat mode and perhaps the turbo vibration sensors and turbo oil/bearing temps but it’s just been too long and I worked more on the nuclear instrumentation snd reactor controls than the other equipment.
@REVNUMANEWBERN
@REVNUMANEWBERN 11 ай бұрын
😳😳💕💕💕💕Loved your detail sharing@@MitchEllis-e4y
@CRYMEARIVER-S4
@CRYMEARIVER-S4 10 ай бұрын
I pump out septic tanks, and your description of a generator are amazing!
@OldSneelock
@OldSneelock Жыл бұрын
I learned more today than in the previous hours of watching others work on their generators. Great explanation. The drawings were immensely helpful. I worked machine repair for the first 10 years of my employment. After that I was supervising others doing it. For the last 10 years I have been retired and doing contract work writing work instructions for several companies. Electronic cameras are a wonderful tool. They let you watch the operation from all sides. Part of the work instruction is providing pictures and drawings of the various processes. I set up 2 or 3 hi rez movie cameras and record the process. Then I clip stills from the video and embed them in the work instruction. If I had the cameras available in the shops I was repairing or training others in how to repair equipment I would have had a much better chance of success. Seeing the MOSFET overload and smoke the fuse is invaluable. Great job and thanks for the explanation. 😁😎
@semillerimages
@semillerimages Жыл бұрын
I’ll never have to do the things you are doing on your farm, but every video you make is so fascinating to watch because of your editing and voice overs. Thanks for all the effort you put into these!
@caveman31750
@caveman31750 Жыл бұрын
I have to give you props for mentioning other youtubers that are more specialized in certain areas. I have watched James Condon mentioned here and I also watch Jesse Muller mentioned in the telescoping lift video. Nothing wrong with giving someone credit for learning something from them. Thanks for all your videos they are appreciated.
@cedricbu7810
@cedricbu7810 Жыл бұрын
I´m a german mechatronic technician and know I´m studying mechanical engineering. And then there is a crazy farmer, who teaches me new things every week....I love it. Thank you John
@andyjame28
@andyjame28 Жыл бұрын
We have used the kzbin.infoUgkxOTeIs0vv4_9B5hsmnLsk9r930uDQLu_Y for probably 30 hours with our camper and it’s been great! The noise level is really only noticeable when running the AC and other appliances like the microwave, hair dryer, or coffee pot. It’s not huge like other ones and it has wheels so even at 90lbs, I can move it!
@Chris-s2e5t
@Chris-s2e5t Жыл бұрын
THAT WAS COOL...IVE BEEN STUDYING FOR 50 years. And you made it simple. Thanks
@dankelley9361
@dankelley9361 Жыл бұрын
Just an excellent tutorial on how generators work in principle & how you went about troubleshooting & repairing. Great job!
@bobnelson6093
@bobnelson6093 Жыл бұрын
Having taught motor/Gen theory for 16 years, you are right on the money. Excellent training!
@seansysig
@seansysig Жыл бұрын
Brushed generator uses capacitor for exciter voltage. James Condon’s channel is excellent and honest !
@MitchEllis-dn9lf
@MitchEllis-dn9lf 4 ай бұрын
Watching the James Condon videos is relaxing, educational and informative.
@Delekham
@Delekham Жыл бұрын
Mr. Condon is my go to guy for Small Engines, very meticulous (almost surgical) in explanation. I really enjoy both of your Channels alot. Learning something always makes my day! :) Granted I am old and forget it the next day. I am sorry to say that I just don't want the "LawnMower" aerobics anymore for my Pressure Washer/Lawnmower/Weed Eater/Roto-tiller/Snowblower and then spend hours cleaning carbs for hours for two to three hours of seasonal work. While I do tolerate wrenching...I am at the age when I just don't wish to anymore :) Thank You for your Trials and Tribulations with each project you encounter and the solutions you come up with. Peace!
@pauljenkins2501
@pauljenkins2501 Жыл бұрын
Greetings from England. I failed physics miserably at school 50 years ago. I just about understood the basic DC current circuit, but nothing more. Your video, and in particular the drawn diagrams, has taught me more about electricity generation than I have ever known before. Thank you.....
@anthonypiper4263
@anthonypiper4263 Ай бұрын
Love watching your channel. Jumping right into things you have not done before. That is how my Dad taught me. The only reason a person does not know how to do something is because they never tried! And James Condon is a very knowledgeable guy. I watch him alot too. Keep on keeping on!
@arcanewyrm6295
@arcanewyrm6295 Жыл бұрын
This in-depth explanation of generator design and function was a nice throwback to a series of elective classes I took in 9th and 10th grade called "Energy, Power And Transportation I/II/III"... some of my favorite classes in high school. And the teacher was just really good at explaining seemingly complex processes with clear examples of simple principles. Much the way you do, John. For folks who learn the way I do, you make a very good teacher/instructor.
@grundegrimstad4703
@grundegrimstad4703 Жыл бұрын
I agree! James Condon is THE small machine guy and his videos are refreshingly free of fuzz, product placements and time consuming chit-chat. He was of great help when i set out to fix my dad´s snow blower.
@papawheelie5835
@papawheelie5835 Жыл бұрын
When I log into youtube and have notifications from both Jon (FarmCraft101) and James (James Condon), it's not an easy choice of which one to watch first. You're both excellent youtubers and I always learn something new from each of you.
@gudfarfar
@gudfarfar Жыл бұрын
That explanation was spot on, just like my teacher explained it back when I trained to be a TV repair engineer, we touched into a lot of different aspects of power generating and usage. We even did a full montage of a fusebox in a house, with all connections and a shitload of wires to connect. The teacher would come up with different malfunction that we was supposed to find and rectify, and at the end we could almost find any problem with any TV or radio set they dumped on us. This was back when TV's was huge and bulky and the flatscreen had not been introduced yet. Nowadays nobody repairs anything anymore, and just pay to get a new item. Thousands of perfectly good electronic devices gets just dumped each year. Like a modern flatscreen tv has to be OLED or it is not good enough, and of course curved screen is a must. It's just so silly.
@williambradford1467
@williambradford1467 Жыл бұрын
Very well done, and a fitting addition to James Condon’s remarkable videos each week. Your diagrams and explanations helped me better understand things I thought I already knew. Your video editing and voiceovers are second to none, and the pace of your work keeps me very interested in every video you post. Great job!
@timhinds9089
@timhinds9089 5 ай бұрын
By the way, great job on the theory. I’m an old Electronics tech from the 60’s Navy. This really helped refresh my schooling.
@bobsrepairshop
@bobsrepairshop Жыл бұрын
I appreciated the diagrams and the ten or twelve minutes you spent explaining how generators work. Well done.
@DS-lg2jb
@DS-lg2jb 2 ай бұрын
I actually understand the concept quite a bit from your explanation and demonstration… great job!!!thank you👍
@coltoncook4058
@coltoncook4058 Жыл бұрын
Thanks John, I've really never fully understood this topic before and now I feel like I have a much more firm grasp on it. Thanks for such a great video and all your other videos too!
@petenelson8136
@petenelson8136 Жыл бұрын
Nice plug for James Condon, I watch him regularly and like you said he definitely knows his stuff. Another well put together video that puts another tool in us Jack of all trades tool boxes.
@OBD01
@OBD01 Жыл бұрын
I think it is a good sign that you keep recommending channels that I am already subscribed. I agree James is wizard with those small engines and generators. I like how he will stay after something until he feels it is the best it can be!
@transformer889
@transformer889 Жыл бұрын
Great demonstration and explanation of how generators work, without this basic understanding it is impossible to troubleshoot any generator. Thanks.
@jimmeroniuk8266
@jimmeroniuk8266 Жыл бұрын
James is my go to generator guru. Watch his hands he is like a doctor. Very smooth movements excellent explaining of what he is doing. Awesome teacher and person. Jon your great too. Love your machinery videos. Keep up the great work. Oh and Thanks again. Gotta go got a Ditchwitch to go and reassemble the fuel system on. Just a small self driven trencher.
@simplyconnected
@simplyconnected Жыл бұрын
Excellent vid. I'm an Industrial Electrician from Ford Motor. I also refurbish portable emergency generators so your vid is right up my alley.
@billroberts3864
@billroberts3864 Жыл бұрын
Again, you are a great teacher and explain segments supported with good drawings. I was glad you saved this engine/generator from the scrap heap. Blessings to you.
@naturesrelaxationmedia1827
@naturesrelaxationmedia1827 Жыл бұрын
Wow... Take a bow... very cool video.... we very rarely comment on videos... but we just had too... 1st off you are one very thuro man...both with the trouble shooting concepts and your fab work and even patients to get the correct slow blow fuses... you caught my attention even more... most just say screw it and use whatever.... we appreciate the professionalism, thumbs up.... 2nd there are so many things identical here it's uncanny..... we too have this 3-cylinder Daihatsu motor on a 10kw gen set... it was made for Dometic for a large RV... ours will run on gasoline or propane, its on gasoline right now... it lived it's 351 hours of life per the functioning hobbs meter, but it lived inside it's compartment on a now scrapped RV... Heavy bugger for sure... we have taken an old junk Pentair Master Temp natural gas pool heater from our local junk scrap metal yard only to stripped everything out of it and now we have a case to install the gen set into that looks 95% the same as yours OEM case... cost zero... Gen Set almost free $300 US.... everything works as new... Here are more similarities... your two meters the Fluke87 III and your Fluke T5-600 we both run the same test equipment...this is too coincidental; we've had these two Fluke Test meters of approx 25-27ish years...amazing you have both these meters or what looks like them.. You fine Sir are a very unique, smart and hugely capable man... I like this... this video was my 1st to see at your channel... not for long... im gonna binge watch over the holiday..... OK sorry for the long back ground story... for MY REAL question.... So we can sort of figure out what this Gen Set was originally used for and how it was hooked up.... Here's my Question you were into the Gen Set Windings to check for stator/rotor damage.... did you happen to notice were the neutral/white and ground/green anywhere in the electrical service breaker box or at the gen's head set... were they every jumper'd together as a main primary electrical source, from a utility typically are... or were the neutral and ground separated...??? Very important to know... in our application will have to keep them separated for its intended use.... im sure you are seeing why we ask and are catch'n my drift... For other readers while off and isolated from any outside electrical connection.... if one checks continuity to neutral/white and ground/green this would be interesting to know....and would answer generally how this unit was installed at in its previous life assuming it was installed correctly there.... Great Channel.... you fine sir would be someone we would break bread with... Have a great 4th holiday... be safe out there.... I will sub and get notices as soon as we hit send on this apologetically long comment.... Keep up the great content....
@kfolse107
@kfolse107 Жыл бұрын
I watch almost all of James' videos, (and yours too). You did a great job troubleshooting and explaining. Keep em coming.
@charles401
@charles401 Жыл бұрын
Well done. Nice shoutout to J. Condon👍
@tomfeldkamp4554
@tomfeldkamp4554 Жыл бұрын
EXCELLENT video once again, Jon. I always learn from you. Thanks for taking the time to make the drawings. They helped me a lot. Another great topic in your channel!!
@peterhanlon.6117
@peterhanlon.6117 5 ай бұрын
Perfect, just Perfect! Thank you from England. I can now go and help a friend look at his Chinese 10kW diesel generator with some optimism which I wouldn't have had before seeing your video. Thanks again, Peter.
@kimberlyvaughan3430
@kimberlyvaughan3430 Жыл бұрын
I studied electrical stuff 30 years ago. This was a great refresher course 😊
@JohnDiMartino
@JohnDiMartino Жыл бұрын
That’s an awesome generator! That engine is an amazing motor . They don’t make them anymore. That is seriously a 20,000 hour engine all day long. I have the same engine in my Ventrac. It was the longest lasting engine they put in them. They are anvil tough. The oil stays clean on them, and you lose more by wiping the dipstick to check it than they burn. They do not burn oil at all. You can neglect them and they keep on going. Those engines are getting very difficult to find the only way to kill them is to run them out of oil intentionally and let them go all day long with no oil or to overheat them until the cylinder, head, warped like a banana ,they will still keep going. Your friend is lucky to have you ,nice work.
@robertcrossley9803
@robertcrossley9803 Жыл бұрын
What a fantastic educational and instructive video. Really felt compelled to listen to your comments regarding how your views on how a generator works Thanks for taking the time to make this video. Look forward to your next.
@ebshusha
@ebshusha 5 ай бұрын
I never get tired of watching Farmcraft101. It doesnt matter how long the videos are. Keep doing the great Job you are doing John. Thank you
@CobetcknnKolowski
@CobetcknnKolowski Жыл бұрын
Always great to see these refurbishment videos!
@ibbriley399
@ibbriley399 Жыл бұрын
One of the best explanations of an a/c generator function I’ve seen. Great for non-electrical and DYIers.
@jaygosch8705
@jaygosch8705 Жыл бұрын
Excellent and very detailed explanation. On a side note, I have that exact same analog multimeter purchased from Radio Shack in the 70's! Still working and very useful to see fluctuations that I can't see on my digital meter. Thanks for all the work you put into this video!
@Cleofizoid
@Cleofizoid Жыл бұрын
I watch James Condon's channel all the time. Small engine generator repair extraordinaire... I heard at least one Eric O. reference here! Love this channel
@nathanweese3812
@nathanweese3812 Жыл бұрын
Really good explainer on the gen windings and such. Its so much easier to hear it from a non engineer who doesnt over-explain and complicate things. Even if some details are missing or wrong (im assuming thats possible) this video got me closer to understanding alot of subjects im interested in. Thanks!
@sonnyh9774
@sonnyh9774 Жыл бұрын
Agreed..... good communication is a valuable skillset
@JRussell-dc3re
@JRussell-dc3re Жыл бұрын
i SAW A DIRT DOBBER NEST IN THE GENERATOR, NEEDS ELIMINATING..... A good generator video. And, James Condon is very good at diagnosing and repairing generators!!
@Brad-lt6mr
@Brad-lt6mr Жыл бұрын
Hi John, propane engines usually require liquid take off from the tank, whereas your BBQ uses vapour take off. That unit between the tank and the engine is a vaporizer. Liquid propane is fed into that unit and converted into vapour. Those units usually have coolant hoses connected (on cars) to prevent the vaporizer from freezing.
@Obsidian0Knight
@Obsidian0Knight Жыл бұрын
His doesn't look like it's got a vape unit. It's probably spec'ed for the general use case where a person is feeding it natural gas.
@silicon.alchemist
@silicon.alchemist Жыл бұрын
No, The unit is not a vaporizer. They are generally only used on larger engines, and require hose connections to the engine coolant to keep them from freezing up. This unit is definitely set up for vapor input, the unit mentioned is simply a pre regulator to reduce vapor pressure. This small 3 cyl engine can be run directly on vapor no problem. If it was a V8, it would definitely use a vaporizer tied to engine coolant. Tank pressure is 100-200 PSI depending on ambient temperature, it needs to be reduced to a few inches water column for the carburetor. Hence the two stage regulators, one on the outside plumbing, and if you noticed, there is another regulator inside the housing for the final low pressure to feed the carb.
@kroperez6761
@kroperez6761 2 ай бұрын
This gentlemen is more value than a GM in any manufacture or place for a mile. 💪
@jaimeortega4940
@jaimeortega4940 Жыл бұрын
Good job! Always enjoy your content and watching your logical, methodical approach to troubleshooting (you've done this before numerous times I'd imagine.) Hope you are well.
@anthonytriolo3643
@anthonytriolo3643 Жыл бұрын
I have been watching Gordon for a long time ,my son turned me to you ,your theory and explanation of generator beats any any Electrical Engineering Class.He does not do theory and explanation he is good and does not give up on the repair.
@kailuagarage
@kailuagarage Жыл бұрын
The bridge rectifier simply keeps the alternating waveform always positive, but it is still alternating from zero to max voltage. The regulator will add a low pass filter to turn it into an actual DC level which can then be adjusted from zero to a max voltage. The low pass filter parameters are adjusted based on the frequency of the ac signal which is set by the speed of the spinning motor.
@JMassengill
@JMassengill Жыл бұрын
I was pretty much coming to say just this.
@RossReedstrom
@RossReedstrom Жыл бұрын
And in fact, the big ol' "can" capacitor used for this is often a point of failure for brushless generators.
@countrygeekpc
@countrygeekpc Жыл бұрын
LOL Half way thru the video I was thinking, "John needs to watch James!" and sure enough, you already did! Thanks for the video!
@madengineer9072
@madengineer9072 Жыл бұрын
This is such a great and clear explanation of how this all works. Very well done.
@MitchEllis-e4y
@MitchEllis-e4y 7 ай бұрын
I too enjoy watching James Condon
@MRrwmac
@MRrwmac Жыл бұрын
BIG Congratulations!!! You deserve it for all the diagnosis and final repair you completed! Your buddy owes you BIG time for the money you saved him on a GREAT generator! You should feel proud cause you really did a nicwe job!
@godbeesmith
@godbeesmith Жыл бұрын
I have a generator size just like that one. Am told it is a shorted stator. After watching this I want a second opinion. You are one smart gentleman. Wish you lived around here.
@abrammarba9700
@abrammarba9700 Жыл бұрын
You've really improved your drawing skills. Maybe the wife will put on refrigerator! Excellent video, as always.
@FarmCraft101
@FarmCraft101 Жыл бұрын
Haha! I knew I needed good diagrams for this one, and trying to make a digital version would have taken forever. So...there might have been some tracing paper involved.... ;-)
@orangetruckman
@orangetruckman Жыл бұрын
@@FarmCraft101 -The effort put into your videos is pretty apparent. Hence why you’re getting repeat customers 😎
@paultheisen5290
@paultheisen5290 Жыл бұрын
Paul from Iowa, I am an Electrician by trade, Great Job and Great Video. I enjoy Generators and making things work
@AnthondeVries
@AnthondeVries Жыл бұрын
7:30 in my years of problem solving things I find; "there is nothing more permanent then a temporary solution".
@chriss6154
@chriss6154 10 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for taking the time to take us along for this ride bud. I learned plenty about actually applying some stuff i had only read about
@noidle22
@noidle22 Жыл бұрын
For reference, the H on a fuse doesn't indicate the fuse speed, that's the breaking capacity, H for high, L for low. The T means slow blow, a fuse marked with an F is fast blow.
@AntonioClaudioMichael
@AntonioClaudioMichael Жыл бұрын
James Condon is a great guy Been watching him for ages lol I saw this video also tagged on James KZbin
@summatim
@summatim Жыл бұрын
Summary was generated by Summatim, let us know if there are any inaccuracies! 🤖 0:01: Introduction 0:59: Control Panel 2:15: Checking the Engine 5:17: Investigating the Control Panel 8:48: Hooking Up Propane 10:43: Fixing a Leak 13:28: Testing the Generator 15:05: Investigating Power Output 19:05: Generator Diagnosis 19:15: Stator and Rotor 21:24: Exciter 27:04: Brushed Generator Setup 27:33: Brushless Generator Setup 36:47: Generator power adjustment 43:59: Brushed vs Brushless Generators 44:08: Introduction 44:36: Pilot Exciter 44:48: Fuse Replacement 45:43: AVR Replacement 50:51: Load Testing 54:06: Powering the Shop 57:36: Conclusion
@matthiku
@matthiku Жыл бұрын
This should be in the description of the video or in a pinned comment/
@MikeGervasi
@MikeGervasi 9 ай бұрын
James has a great channel. Very instructional and easy to understand.
@daekjern
@daekjern Жыл бұрын
love that the engine goes "ha ha ha " when it stops kranking.
@tjhanlonjr
@tjhanlonjr Жыл бұрын
I seriously love that you explained in detail because I have a simple understanding on generators. The proof your never to old to learn something new
@akhtarkh
@akhtarkh Жыл бұрын
Perhaps James Condon can learn something from this video about explaining to his viewers what generator windings do instead of just showing them the testing.
@dalexdba1
@dalexdba1 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic description of brushed and brushless generators! This for me was really a true lightbulb moment. Thanks very much indeed for going through it this way!
@AntonioClaudioMichael
@AntonioClaudioMichael Жыл бұрын
Your explanations are spot on and As Big Clive Would Say "A Full Bridge Rectifer"
@suelynch
@suelynch Жыл бұрын
Hey you did great. You managed to fix it. I have been subbed to James channel for years. His vid are great. I live in a city (Adelaide, South Australia). Generators are not allowed within city limits. We are allowed to have solar though. I have a 6.8 kW (pure sine-wave) solar setup. The system has already been put through its paces and worked well. Recent wild thunderstorm knocked out power in my area for over 24 hours.
@jaredbelcher1985
@jaredbelcher1985 Жыл бұрын
The absolute best and easiest explanation of not only generators but brushless/brushed motors etc. Thank you!
@dbeckley43
@dbeckley43 Жыл бұрын
Been watching James for years very interesting channel, your repair was spot on as well.
@herbertprince2192
@herbertprince2192 Жыл бұрын
If you had been my high school electronics instructor, I may had stayed in that class, but now at 66 years of age, you are still a genius at how to go from one thing to another, to find what the problem is. Seems people around here just want to scrap something and get a new one, of whatever it may be. I miss fabrication and building things. Maybe again if I can learn how to walk again with a prosthetic leg. I enjoyed watching. Thank you !
@dalepowell6815
@dalepowell6815 Жыл бұрын
You overall knowledge of just about everything is amazing. You should be a teacher for our young...
@terrydavis6631
@terrydavis6631 4 ай бұрын
Outstanding troubleshooting, thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise.
@lx2077bob26
@lx2077bob26 Жыл бұрын
Amazing troubleshooting,Love watching ALL your vids late at night betterthan cable...lastly you are such a good person always helping others
@GHOOGLEMALE
@GHOOGLEMALE Жыл бұрын
Simply superb demonstration of the brushed and brushless systems - Even I understood it..
@richardkilb8305
@richardkilb8305 4 ай бұрын
Excellent tutelage for the generator, I was excited ( see what I did there). My theory would be on smaller engines the pressure pulses vary more ( instantaneous speed on crank ) producing dirty fluctuating power. On a multi cylinder engine the multiple pressure pulses are smoother so it is cleaner. Cheers Rick
@davidhaag9116
@davidhaag9116 Жыл бұрын
Good recommendation for a JAMES CONDON. He’s excellent on generators very knowledgeable. Thank you, John.
@ewicky
@ewicky Жыл бұрын
Excellent repair! And yes, James is the best!
@mpfla8095
@mpfla8095 Жыл бұрын
Great video. You have absolutely nailed the diagnostic approach to solving problems. But even better is your safety first approach to fuel. Demonstrating best practices for set up and testing of propane vapour is paramount. Thank you
@robertdoell4321
@robertdoell4321 9 ай бұрын
I am not Nit picky so I think this was an excellent explanation of Generators. Well Done. I subscribed.
@JWHart-f4e
@JWHart-f4e Жыл бұрын
Thank you for a somewhat detailed explanation of a generation, the best I have seen and explained in a long time. Thank-you again.
@jamescole1786
@jamescole1786 Жыл бұрын
4/23/23;..friend's 15,000W propane Brigs& Stratton 3cylinder generator...de-mouse-ifed, re-fuse'd, re-volt-regulated, re-plumbered pipe leaks & multi-load tested...wow Jon, great educational video 2day! You can fix soo many problems... issues..humm...ever thought about running for public office?..Governor? Senator? President?...we have lots of 'short-circuits' throwing 'hot sparks' everywhere...I look at your closing video shot 2day...a nice walk in the peaceful pasture on a beautiful day watching 'Ole Betsy chewing a mouthful of nourishment...Much enjoy your channel, your many talents & accomplishments. Give us more! Stay safe & carry on!👏👏👍👍👷😊🔧⚙️🚜
@Timothy-lb2vr
@Timothy-lb2vr Жыл бұрын
I feel I’m auditing a masters level course in rotors and stators of which I know almost bupkis (nothing). But, farmer Jon’s voice is what I call ‘easy listening’. Much like my favorite sports announcers. The upshot is when your explaining something, you either have the proper timbre and resonance in your voice,,,, you have those two qualities, or you don’t. I feel I should send you a check as a thank you for your expertise and your God given talents.
@ilyagoretoy9222
@ilyagoretoy9222 9 ай бұрын
Very good and easy to follow and understand. The best of all right to the point without gimmicks and mimics ❤
@mikeburton7077
@mikeburton7077 Жыл бұрын
Only just found your channel and am really enjoying it ,I will watch from episode 1
@sgardi2
@sgardi2 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I learned so much from watching this. I have an older onan marine generator on my boat and it's working now but I'm sure in the near future I will need to do some repairs.
@tombauer7330
@tombauer7330 Жыл бұрын
Yup, James Condon is one of my favs too.
@rudyzepeda2800
@rudyzepeda2800 9 ай бұрын
Fascinating. I was cautious and concerned the information was over my head. You went through the troubleshooting so deliberately and explained yourself quite simply. I learned alot. Thanks
@johnplump3760
@johnplump3760 Жыл бұрын
I also appreciate how tou explained the circuit of a generator. Thank you
@j.w.perkins6004
@j.w.perkins6004 Жыл бұрын
What a fabulous teaching tool you have created. This should be in every electrical engineering syllabus in college! It's a nut and bolts critical problem solving class in itself. Congrats on the bottom-line, start to finish, critical-path detective work! Thank you... Spanish has a term...mil-gracias...A thousand thank you's.
@desaint4952
@desaint4952 Жыл бұрын
many years ago I was taught that the best way to prevent gas leaks is to use the yellow teflon tape then use a layer of piper dope on top of the tape, it works like a charm
@donanything6816
@donanything6816 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I grew up around electronics with dad being a TV repairman from the 50's. There's always more to learn. Thanks for taking the time for us.
@krz8888888
@krz8888888 Жыл бұрын
Nice shoutout to James, he's knowledgable indeed on this stuff
@akhtarkh
@akhtarkh Жыл бұрын
Thank you, very, very well explained. I have been looking for this explanation on youtube but could not find one. There is a youtuber "James Condon" who makes generator repair videos, even though he has never explained this well how the generetor works, and I can't fix fix something if I don't know how it works.
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