Go to meetfabric.com/JIMSAUTO and start investing in your child today.
@MattTrevett5 ай бұрын
I legit was not aware about this. Don't have kids, but I'll forward the link to others who do.
@tetedur3775 ай бұрын
Skipped the sponsored ad as I always do. I pay for Premium, I don't want to see people hawking products, especially goods and services it's unlikely they even use.
@bryanpratt39335 ай бұрын
One of my favorite channels, SmallEngineMechanic, did a 3-part series on one of these, including servicing the generator end. He is very knowledgeable on these older generators. His had some different problems than yours, but I'd still say it's a must-watch if you want to learn about servicing this model. KZbin doesn't like links, so the video title is "Lets Get This 1945 ONAN Generator Running Pt.1", if you search that it does come up (for me, anyway). Great project, excited to see where it goes!
@Corey-dy2cq5 ай бұрын
I vote restore it and fix it right since you guys can. It will be a fun father son project and you'll have a beast of a generator when it's done.
@Sunspot-195 ай бұрын
I concur! That thing is very cool and would be awesome to preserve.
@JAMSIONLINE5 ай бұрын
We're gonna do our best with what's available!
@SuperchiefApache5 ай бұрын
Nah…you two got this!
@stvrob63205 ай бұрын
@@JAMSIONLINE You still have the worn out cam to deal with though.
@JAMSIONLINE5 ай бұрын
@@stvrob6320 it’s gonna be sent out for a regrind. Non issue lol
@SEO1225 ай бұрын
My dad was a volunteer firefighter in the 1970s. The Baraboo Fire Department had one of these Onan generators, which were called "light plants", to run the Klieg lights when responding to night-time fires and emergencies. They surplused it out, and my dad bought it for our farm in Baraboo. It was fire engine red, mounted on a wheeled dolly, and had a 10 gallon fuel tank. Dad installed it in the workshop barn, running the exhaust pipe outside, and had it tied via a big knife switch to the mains. During the Blizzard of 1978, power in our neck of the Wisconsin woods went out for a week, but Dad disconnected the mains from the grid, and the Onan light plant ran the farmhouse and barn no problems. These were designed to run continuously for extended periods, with the big radiators, heavy duty block, deep sump, and generator. With the exhaust being routed outside, it was very quiet! Ours didn't run as hot as yours appears to run, but I do remember the barn being warm from the heat shed by the radiator - nice to have in a blizzard! I miss Dad and his Onan, hopefully you two can restore yours back to standby condition, it will serve you well!
@iaial04 ай бұрын
Blizzard temperature is a few degrees less than summer heat, so that may have helped😁
@tomscott47235 ай бұрын
She 's a runner, can't stop now! I love how in the old days they designed STYLE into everything, the grill is a piece of art in itself, and made to last a lifetime! Loven it!
@BruceBoschek5 ай бұрын
We had a big 30 kw genset with a Wisconsin V4 that had autostart. You could turn on any light or appliance anywhere on the property and hear the throaty roar as the Wisconsin came to life. When you shut the last load off it would wait about 30 seconds before shutting down. As a kid I loved that feature! 🙂 Thanks for the video. I remember seeing units like that when we went shopping at the local "Monkey Wards" back in the '40s and '50s. Sears had similar ones.
@JAMSIONLINE5 ай бұрын
Haha awesome! Thanks for the story and for watching! After skimming the manual, it looks like there’s possibly an adjustment for how sensitive the auto start is. We may just have to tinker some more!
@aaronvienot5 ай бұрын
@@JAMSIONLINE given that electronic loads didn't exist in the 1940s, you might have to use a fairly low-impedance resistive or magnetic load load (like that incandescent light and drill shown in the video) as the basis of tweaking the autostart. It would be interesting to see if it can pick up a modern LED light bulb, but who knows? Looking forward to the next installment!
@ivanhorban3405 ай бұрын
Electric bearing grease is conductive, prevents eddy currents from frying the bearings by arcing to the case.
@MikeHarris19845 ай бұрын
That is such a cool ass little generator. Montgomery wards. A name I haven't heard since the 80's. My grandparents loved wards....they sold all kinds of stuff! I had these two "Alarm" kits from there still in the original plastic packaging when I was like 15. I wish I kept them. You installed it and put an on/off switch from your ignition to a hidden spot and a push button. So you would flip the hidden switch to on, then push and hold the secret button, then turn your key to start. Before cars had computers and were simple 12v circuits. Lol
@Mega74925 ай бұрын
I have a Ward's chainsaw, and a Westerfield 20 gauge shot gun.
@WalkerSmallEnginePerformance5 ай бұрын
I had a 70 GMC that I rigged my lighter up so that it was a switch that would interrupt power to the ignition coil. To start the truck, you had to pull the cigarette lighter. It was never stolen so my anti-theft system was obviously effective.
@DcGuitarkid5 ай бұрын
9:07 had me chucklin. "i think you think more than you think you think" good banter always from you two.
@pauljohnstone47235 ай бұрын
Totally trusting your work. Take the generator outside to test if and make sure the fire fighting equipment is close by. Good idea. I worked with a man who started at least 4 fires inside the workshop because he didn't think for 2 seconds about what he was going to do next.
@markmcmullen13715 ай бұрын
Look into line to line skirt coatings to tighting up skirt clearnces and just rering it if the cylinders can be honed, I believe the autostart means it's wired to the building wiring and when the building looses power it will autostart to restore power on its own. Keep up the good work really enjoy watching you 2.
@peteloomis84565 ай бұрын
They probably have the stuff to knurl the pistons in house I would think to do the same thing without paying anymore from another shop to do this . Now if they could find new pistons or possibly have Wiseco make new pistons for this they could have the skirts coated to reduce scuffing like many modern pistons are today for just about every application. My Skidoo Mach 1 I had I had done a top end job on it & I used moly coated pistons in it & they worked great and actually made less noise than a factory piston did although it was a little hard to hear because I had dual tuned expansion chambered pipes on it to make more power than the factory pipe and stingers could that I had made by a well known guy that builds custom pipes stingers and engines for Skidoo ice oval race sleds .
@randygandee96745 ай бұрын
Line to line works. Have seen it work well in race engines
@GIGABACHI5 ай бұрын
My stance on this one it's "Fix it completely to the level that it can be used as it once was intended" OR just "pass it" to someone that needs parts OR it's willing to go the distance to make it like the day it left the factory's door. I understand there may be issues trying to source some (maybe all ?) of the important parts that would need replacement. Best of luck and keep "resuscitating" old machines that still have a fight in it and historical value. I'll keep watching. ☺👍🏻
@lonokolotowicz55975 ай бұрын
This gen set is from an era that things were made to last.
@donscott64315 ай бұрын
Now I want to see it bored, honed, decked, rods removed and polished, crankshaft counterweights “knife-edged” and rebalanced, new guides and valves, oil pump replaced and then maybe turbocharged 😂😂😂
@ellieprice3635 ай бұрын
Yeah I hear ‘ya. Put a full race cam and dual pipes in that sucker.
@francisschweitzer84315 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@disturbedrocks19964 ай бұрын
This is the kinda crazy shit i’d do if I had Elon Musk level money. Retire someplace quiet and wrench on old iron until my fingers fall off in protest
@iaial04 ай бұрын
Custom welded full titanium exhaust 😂
@billmise5 ай бұрын
I have the same generator mine is 3 phase with 4 cylinder contintal engine it had 7 hours on it when I took it out of a hospital it has over 700 on it now using it at our hunting camp .Great machine it will run 24 hours on 12 gallons of fuel at 1800 rpms
@ttyR2653 ай бұрын
Most Walmarts still carry 30w non-detergent oil for small engine use. I'm a bit of a vintage generator junkie having 5 1940's Kohler 1A21/1M21's. This old iron deserves to be preserved and repaired. Thank you for taking care of yours! If ultimately you don't want to repair it, find someone on the Smokstak forum who would be interested in it.
@nathancarlisle28015 ай бұрын
For 78 years old and probably abused/neglected most of its life, she ran real good. I hope im doing that well at 78. Another vote to clean it up and take it as far as reasonably possible
@Dina0wnes4 ай бұрын
The cleaning guys smile at 2:07-2:08 makes this project 1000% worth it.
@craighansen75945 ай бұрын
It is a really interesting old machine! The fact that it works and can be returned to service makes it a worthwhile project. It never hurts to have auxiliary power on hand, so it's still relevant despite its age.
@Richard-be9gp5 ай бұрын
First post from a regular viewer, Its nice to throw something different into the mix. Keeps viewers wondering what's next on the bench. Love watching the father son dynamic play out, wish my dad was still around an aircraft mechanic was a bit of hard ass though. LoL
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
Same here. Dad was a Braniff A&P for 30 and them we opened an industrial small engine shop here in KC and did THAT from '81 to '09. Pretty damn inflexible and downright narrow-minded about certain things.
@jcnpresser5 ай бұрын
I’m impressed on how easy it started. Usually something that sits like that has trouble starting, bales are little sticky and rusty. That thing fired right up.
@chaedrion5 ай бұрын
Glad to see you guys doing this stuff, enjoy your time while you can because one day you'll be turning wrenches together and the next you'll be hoping to remember it. Lost my father unexpectedly beginning of last year, thankfully I was able to save the truck we'd work on whenever we got together. '84 k10 named it "Grumpy" on account of it only starts when it wants too. Always brings a smile to my heart seeing other families turning wrenches together.
@philliptipton93715 ай бұрын
Thatsa good name for an old uncooperative geezer of a truck. Do ya mind if I name my 99 Tahoe grumpy? It's got an intermittent start issue also. Sorry bout your pops, I lost mine in 95. I always think of him.
@chaedrion5 ай бұрын
Of course. Can always use more Grumpy's in this world.
@castinn5 ай бұрын
Loved it when you started getting excited about where your washer went -- and you were disassembling over an oven floor drain. That's the kind of crap I do.
@c.e.g74485 ай бұрын
A "piston return spring" is one of the things an apprentice was (is?) sent to get from a parts shop. Someone I know was sent to get a box of new sparks for the sparkplugs. At the start of winter, he had to change the tiers for a customer. Swap the summer tiers for the winter tiers. When he finished, the other mechanics asked him if he had filled the tiers with the correct air. He had to fill them with "winter air". If he had not done that, he would have had to get the tiers off the car again and clean the inside of the tiers to get rid of the "summer air", because that would damage the tiers. They stopped him when he started to get the wheels off the car again. No, it was not me!
@johngray38605 ай бұрын
This thing is a piece of industrial art that deserves to be brought back!!!
@gordondowd51895 ай бұрын
I believe you absolutely can rebuild it, assuming you want to. That is a very solid old machine. No modern electronics. Gold.
@Jonathan-hx6oy5 ай бұрын
The auto start should have live power on it, so it starts when line power fails.
@mitchellstrobbe77795 ай бұрын
Definitely this
@robturner30655 ай бұрын
No it's an off-grid device, auto start senses demand. As soon as you switch on a light or an appliance the Genny starts up. It's not a back up generator.
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
@@robturner3065 Yes if you stick a volt meter in one of the cabin/house's electrical outlets it will show either 12 or 24 volts depending on the unit. Switch a lamp on and she cranks up and goes.
@throttlejockey345 ай бұрын
I know most folks think Chevy, Ford, John deer or international. But for me, these small engines helped build this country too. And I love seeing them restored to running condition. Sure, an 800 hp v8 is cool. But what about the simplicity of an old maytag engine? Thanks for another great video.
@surferdude44875 ай бұрын
She's tired, but she still works. As far as I'm concerned, your content is pure gold. I'll be watching whatever you decide to work on.
@wacholder56905 ай бұрын
It is always fun, entertaining and educational to see both of your working with antique stuff. Most people had looked at it and tossed it for scrap money. Honestly I *wished* that you would take it apart and prepare it for a second life of some extend. Other than being a "somewhat working" museum exhibition piece. Understandably you have more things to do to pay the bills. But I eagerly wait for oncoming episodes on that machine. Thank for all the care and for showing !
@cobra024115 ай бұрын
I have to say it's amazing to see the engine brought back to life in it's current state while seeing the problems and such. I am really looking forward to seeing the engine refreshed / rebuilt and see how it runs.
@jessebybee35215 ай бұрын
I have an old 1940s, Montgomery Ward lathe, and it's crazy to think that a generator like that probably powered it's motor at one point. I may be young, but I love these old Machines.
@DanielCoffey675 ай бұрын
The fuel bowl came out of the washer lovely! It looks brand new.
@SilentRedem5 ай бұрын
I’m a generator technician And This was a very fun video! Even after spending a day of already working on generators lol
@gregoryschmitz21315 ай бұрын
Yea I was as well though I would call myself Elctro Mechanical as I worked on engines, the Alternator end, transfer switches, switch gear. What I am missing is why the odd start system but......
@bobqzzi5 ай бұрын
"Let's get these valves adjusted," cut to a shot of sledge hammer. LOL. You guys are killing it lately with the editing. Great project
@tdotw775 ай бұрын
😅Yeah I thought that exactly too! Hammer them right into adjustment! 😅👍🏻👌🏻🛠️🔧 ✊🏻🇺🇸🦅
@rodneymiddleton96245 ай бұрын
That was fun! I use a Kil-o-watt plug adapter to set the frequency on the generators I repair. I purchased it from Amazon. Nice work!
@QuintinMasseyАй бұрын
I’m like 7 or 8 videos in and this one is the coolest by far. I think it’s the whole discovery process of not knowing what’s inside or what condition things are in and you guys taking us along for the ride.
@jeffreydurham53425 ай бұрын
That little engine sounded good! I can't wait to hear it after y'all fix the blow-by and valve issues. Thanks for sharing.
@jasonwood73405 ай бұрын
From what I have read about electric motor bearing grease (and seen firsthand) it's a bit more tacky / waxy so that it stays in the bearing better while the motor is running, instead of running out of the bearing and fouling up the inside of the motor windings. We have Mobil Polyrex EM at work.
@amundsen5755 ай бұрын
your multimeter could have frequency measurment which will give you rpm reading 60Hz= 1800 RPM
@DoubleE-22505 ай бұрын
I was hoping they would show the Hz. They should call @jcondon1 for help on the generator head.
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
At my shop we had two old plug-in style electric clocks and we'd plug them both in simultaneously - one into the genset one into the utility company and when the utilities-powered clock said 60 seconds both were unplugged and then we would compare the genset rate to the Public Utility's rate.
@bobdavis52164 ай бұрын
Greetings from Humboldt County California. Trip down memory lane when you brought out the drill. I still have some tools from the 1930’s my grandpa used, working as a millwright.
@DacDac-w7rАй бұрын
This engine needs to be fully restored and in a Museum. It maybe one of a few still running on the planet.
@ralphs885 ай бұрын
That is an awesome old generator. Rebuild and restore!!!
@Ed_in_Md5 ай бұрын
Great video guys. I love watching you two work together. Wish there were more fathers and sons like you two. Thanks.
@georgeshehan51505 ай бұрын
I vote for reworking it unless it's far too costly. It's just unusual enough to be interesting.
@timothyball31445 ай бұрын
I agree with your plan as stated, with one possible addition. If possible, pull the pistons and clean them.
@jayt65245 ай бұрын
Watching you both. I miss my Dad. Been gone for 24 years. Cherish what you have together.
@johnhufnagel5 ай бұрын
I mean I could see... * dingle ball or just run honing stones through the bores to see if they clean up with minimal material removal * remove and clean all the rings from the pistons and reinstall * stick the valves in the fancy new CNC machine and clean up the stems * install smaller diameter valve guides to match the valves * face the valves * install valve seats (nice hardened ones for modern gas) * surface the mating surfaces * fix the worn bits on the governor * do something about the worn bearing for the fan * fix or tweak any of the other little things you find and I bet it runs 1000% better than it currently does. it'll probably still chuff a bit, but then given its age it probably chuffed when new.
@milwaukeeroadjim92535 ай бұрын
Always wanted to see a small engine repair. Thanks for the video
@roberthocking91385 ай бұрын
It does my OCD the world of good to see your well organised, clean workshop, and so well equipped, congrats
@BookkeepersHusband5 ай бұрын
That thing was just humming along! Too bad it smoked like a freight train. 😂
@thorsbyguy51215 ай бұрын
36:04 "I don't know why everything on this has to be so heavy". Ha Ha! It's like that because it was designed by someone who planned to buy one for his cabin, and he wanted it to outlast him and basically everyone he knew, and maybe it has. Whenever I'm faced with choosing between two similar featured, similar priced consumer items, I pick both of them up and ALWAYS buy the heavier one.
@realblakrawb5 ай бұрын
Rpm dictates frequency, and the voltage regulator is going to control the field windings to adjust voltage.... Usually. If you guys want to tune it.
@mumfordthepitbull45815 ай бұрын
But if the regulator is not working, output voltage will increase with higher RPM.
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
@@mumfordthepitbull4581 Right but the engine's Watt Governor is supposed to keep it running at exactly 1800 rpm under half-rated-load. That way it's a tic too fast at very low load and a tic too slow at max load - but it will be close enough.
@AndrewBirrenkott5 ай бұрын
Way more queit than similar ones that size. I love that it's water cooled. It's such a cool piece of history!
@poogy35 ай бұрын
Beautyful machine.....I cant wait for the rebuild and it's future use!!!!!!
@vanislescotty5 ай бұрын
Immensely interesting. Already looking forward to the next episode. You two may now be the leading experts in 80 year old Onan engines.
@claudyfocan7315 ай бұрын
About the grease, there are different thicknesses of grease. Some applications require thicker or less viscous grease. (NLGI number) usually it can be found in the documentation of the manufacturer. NLGI 2 is very often used for bearings for example. About the greases not “mixing” has to do with the soap used to thicken it. Some are Calcium based, others are Lithium based. There are a few others too. One can use different brands mixed together, your machine doesn’t give a damn. But lithium and calcium based greases should not be mixed as they won’t mix very well. Lithium has higher temperature resistance, making it a very popular choice. Calcium based greases don’t cope very well above 70°C. I’m an Electromechanic on a large dredging ship, I work for a famous Belgian dredging/offshore company. We use “Molly” in most applications. Including elektromotors. Molykote BR2+ it has MoS in it, helps to lubricate even when it dries out. Expensive stuff but its really really good. I would also recommend against spraying brake cleaner over commutators and wires. As it breaks down plastic and hurts some rubbers. Try to keep the stuff away from important plastic and rubber things such as electrical isolation. CRC makes Elektroclean spray, I cannot recommend that stuff enough. It also dissolves dirt and grease, to a certain extent. Not as good as brake cleaner, but it will not damage rubber and plastic, it vaporizes quickly and leaves no residue. Safe to use on electrical parts and even PCB’s.
@iaial04 ай бұрын
I've read a comment here that said that bearing grease for electric applications is conductive, as it will prevent arcing between the balls and the shell, prolonging the life of the bearing. Is this true?
@tcmtech75155 ай бұрын
I think those were mass-produced and badged under several different names. I have one badged as a Fairbanks Morse. A buddy of mine has a GE version, and another guy had one that is tagged as a Sears Something or other and I have seen others at antique shows with other names as well. All of them are identical in design and layout as yours with only minor changes in paint color and electrical output. (115 VAC/12 VDC, 115 VAC/32VDC, 32VDC.)
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
I think this one might be a Kohler. The Right Guy can look up it's Monkey Ward's Model number and tell who built it. It's GOTTA a Kohler or Onan. Fairbanks Morse built a lot of gensets but none this little.
@SEO1225 ай бұрын
It's an Onan. We had one on our farm that was Onan and that's how my dad found parts for it.
@grudd615 ай бұрын
Anudda outstanding Father & Son video!!! You guys are something special!!
@joshonthetube5 ай бұрын
On the high voltage issue, i think you would set the engine speed based on the frequency of the electricity (60 hz) rather than voltage, and the voltage should end up in the right spot... and the variability is probably just wear in the governor that you can tighten up.
@anihopkins67885 ай бұрын
Please do a full rebuild, I’m so excited to see more of this old lady!
@matthewgreen13125 ай бұрын
I love it! It's like tinkering vicariously!😊
@BobSmith-mj7ik5 ай бұрын
So cool that it actually runs and operates after all those years
@stephenpoe20375 ай бұрын
We had a drill like that when I worked for the City of Santa Ana. It could hurt you BAD ! I think it runs pretty good considering the age and condition. I am sure you will make it MUCH better ! Thanks for sharing !
@michaelprue90245 ай бұрын
How cool is that ! That little generator fired up easier than my fancy modern genset does. I’d love to have one.
@SteveNicoson-u1i5 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great Jim and Nickolas. I found this video most interesting and learned a lot about that little engine. My vote is to press ahead and clean it up and value job and adjust a few things, definitely worth saving and having for a backup machine!!!!!! Nice little generator i think. I expected more wear and tear than it actually had. Yes it had some but not excessive the way I look at it. You can afford a few dollars of investment into it. Kind of interesting how that little motor is put together and runs. Neat little machine. Will be anxious to put it in and see how it performs. I bet it will work just fine and be a great little setup to have. Thanks to both of you for the voice over as you took it apart. Has been interesting. Until next time, you both take care. The retired Air Force veteran. 😊😊👍👋✅🇺🇸🇺🇸
@sloth0jr5 ай бұрын
Best father-son project.
@ScottFugate19615 ай бұрын
It's way more interesting to me to watch y'all figure out how to fix stuff like this, the MiniMo, the Jeep, etc. than building yet another V8 screamer. Keep up the great work. Wish you were close enough for my project.
@Joshlawler63365 ай бұрын
Love the videos and the knowledge from “the cleaning guy”. Subscribed a while back during the rebuild of the tractor motor. Wishing you guys nothing but success.
@CAMCAM4135 ай бұрын
That will be an awesome build project 🤓
@bulldog62js5 ай бұрын
Absolutely restore that ol' girl. Keeping a piece of history alive. I remember Montgomery Ward very well from when I was a child. Would love to see it brought back to life.
@MoldyStir-Fry5 ай бұрын
I sincerely hope you are able to get this generator running better than new again! Maybe a nice paint job and some TLC here and there and I think this beautiful little machine can last another 80 years powering someone's home in emergencies!
@Sunspot-195 ай бұрын
Napa has non detergent, guyz!! Easy to find, even Wally World has it. Fun project. Interestingly enough, you were actually able to find a fuel pump kit.
@robburley94945 ай бұрын
Love when you check out and rebuild the older stuff there is more diversity before machining, materials and cad made engines as good as they are now for the most part.
@joecummings12605 ай бұрын
Set the gov for 1800 RPM first, and then you need to adjust the field excitation to get to your 110 0r 120 volts. The frequency of the power generated is a direct function of the RPM. That being a 4 pole alternator, it will make 60hz at exactly 1800. The cheaper generators you see at the big box stores are "2 pole" units. They will generate 60hz at 3600 RPM. Now if you want a slower speed, you use a 6 pole alternator and that will make 60hz at 1200 RPM That is when you start to get into units designed to run for long periods of time, like a completely off the grid worksite that runs 24/7/365 8 pole you run at 900 RPM 10 pole runs 720 And so on and so on
@1997cr80r5 ай бұрын
Spot on information here! Instead of using a tach I just put my multi meter on it set to frequency and set it to 61-62hz for these smaller units no load and at full load make sure its not falling below 58-59hz. Tad easier then setting up a tach and probably a bit more accurate. Another think I cringed to watch is them starting and stopping the generator with load applied but on that old unit it's likely fine.
@eman101985 ай бұрын
Genset tech for Cummins here. Use a couple 1k watt resistive heaters as load banks to really test it.
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
I buy my Onan parts from Cummins.
@iaial04 ай бұрын
They did hook up a couple of 1.5kW electric heaters later in the video
@wallbawden55115 ай бұрын
This little gem of an engine could not be in safer hands so glad you got hold of it or it would be scrap by now big cheers for wanting to do it up some what as i think it will be around for a life time to come Cheers all
@williamhudson53935 ай бұрын
I would love to see you all restore this. Great project.
@theoldman88775 ай бұрын
That was a natives American torture technique. When I started doing engine repairs, fuel pump repair kits were extremely common, just like carburetor kits . Brake and clutch repair kits had new lining materials and rivets . Also available was factory rebuilt components. Intended for the DIY people. I did all that work myself because I had the skills, and it reduced the numbers of repeated failures. I hate repeat repairs.
@johnnyholland87655 ай бұрын
I would spend a little money and fix it. Who knows you might need it one day...
@garylyon28675 ай бұрын
Small engine mechanic knows all about these types of generators. Trouble is he is in NJ.
@rheidtech5 ай бұрын
Yes sir. I mentioned it too. 🎩
@DoubleE-22505 ай бұрын
We've not seen a new video from him for a while. I loved his restorations of *large* generators. I miss his videos.
@DoubleE-22505 ай бұрын
Perhaps James Condon could help.
@LaLaLand.Germany5 ай бұрын
And is MIA for 8 months...
@rheidtech5 ай бұрын
@@LaLaLand.Germany he hangs with @805roadking hes in a bunch of his new vids. probably busy with work.
@hardwurkindaddy5 ай бұрын
Love to see it restored
@gregoryschmitz21315 ай бұрын
The series is great. Information is for after you guys do your magic, not being critial, just for context and learning for all. Marine engines (at least diesel) had just a large object screen for a filter (at one time, may have changed since the 70s). A few hours with no intake filtration in a clean area, not an issue. Other than NLG1 rating, any good grease works in a motor bearing (or generator or motor generator). Used the same grease for machine bearings. The chemistry of the base can be different and for long term, you don't want to mix some bases with other bases (charts for that as some are worse than others). Short term not an issue. As for oil, any oil is fine short term as well. Deutz at one time had just a screen and changed oil every 50 hours. Those old Deutz lasted forever. The funniest one I can remember was when they recovered the B-29 out of Nevada dessert in the 70s or 80s I think (now Fifi). Non detergent oil required, only container was quart cans. You could get away with 40 gallons per engine if not loaded down. Yep, hundreds of cans latter.......... Easier to get back then though! Compressors used to be ND oil only as well but that has changed. Double Sealed bearing for that generator when you get there is the best, good for a normal motor life of 10 years continuous running let alone how many hours that one is going to run once you guys do your amazing work on it. SKS bearings are the best.
@IowaBudgetRCBashers4 ай бұрын
Small brushes towards the rear are your 12v side, middle brushes are your 120v side, and 3rd inner most brushes are 220v ..
@tuberNunya4 ай бұрын
That is the coolest old generator. They don't make them like that anymore. They had to go in the back room LMAO! I remember when we had to use that stuff.
@ueoalf5 ай бұрын
love to see it back together and running love old motors
@jasonhaag16115 ай бұрын
I can’t wait to see it totally restored and I like the color it is
@benhall21465 ай бұрын
Love your channel!! One of the very few that I'll happily watch hour long videos!!
@gregoryschmitz21315 ай бұрын
What you guys are seeing is its a droop governor. You set high and then on full load its both frequency and voltage that drops. You have to choose what is normal for your uisel. A lot like the old Cruise control. Hit a hill and a good 5 mph off if steep or long enough (or both). Now they maintain to less than 1 mph. In this case a bit higher voltage and freq is not going to hurt but you would want it closer to 130 if load is low enough (ie, slow down). Vehicle plug in or electric heaters make good loads if you want to see what maximum is. Check the rated wattage on gen and a vehicle is 750 watts, heaters will list their wattage and often multi selective. Amp draw is under 20 amps as that is a normal house circuit breaker (screw in fuse for that Gen!).
@philliptipton93715 ай бұрын
Watt a great piece of history. I would love to have it at my mom's happy mountain cabin.
@PatrickBrad-p1v5 ай бұрын
I saw the same radiator design on a hotel in south beach Miami by The Clevelander back in the 80s Very art deco, Very cool.
@patrickshaw85955 ай бұрын
To me it looks "Styled By Brook Stevens" who also did John Deere, Studebaker and Lawnboy among many others.
@gazza1165 ай бұрын
i remember split skirt pistons,the split had to go opposite the thrust side.great vid guys
@pauldixon30895 ай бұрын
Beautifully engineered little generator, they knew what they were doing when that was made👍
@ChristmasCrustacean15 ай бұрын
I think hone and rings and send it, focus on fixing the valvetrain and cam
@markbernier84345 ай бұрын
Sloppy as that may be internally I would bet it would run a cottage or hunt camp for another 25 years with no service at all. That is a true auto start set up not a standby power. These were for hunt camps and the like with no grid connection at all.
@drive425 ай бұрын
I would suggest surfacing the contact area where the cam follower meets the valve stem so previous wear areas do not pull the valve stem against the guide. It looked to me like the valve and guide were worn more at the bottom(spring end) than the top. I used to work at a Deere dealership and recall their engines used wear caps on the valves. I wonder if wear caps on these valves would be helpful. I really enjoy your videos and encourage you to keep up the good work!
@adamrehling69715 ай бұрын
Love watching your videos. This one especially. You guys are great together to watch.
@TestECull4 ай бұрын
It ran just fine and started INSTANTLY so I say it earned a complete overhaul. Bottom and top end.
@LarryBunch-q7j5 ай бұрын
Hopefully you can find some valves and get the Cam re ground. Rings might be an issue also. I think you guys can make this little Engine run great!
@donchonealyotheoneal54565 ай бұрын
I think you should go all the way fix everything that you can. And even things that you can't
@sampsonsunny62985 ай бұрын
Hi from Sydney Australia. Make American great again.