cajunrebel`
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2015
- Messages
- 70
So my father was having a mobile home put in on a property he just bought in Mississippi and needed power to help with constructing steps. His generator was still in Alabama at the time and I live 40 minutes away in Louisiana, so I lent him mine. Both generators are the same basic model, Troy built, 10 hp Briggs and Straton, 5550W, and both are inverter units I believe.
Well long story short (no pun intended here), my dad wired it up wrong to the 220V plug before hooking into his breaker box. Put a hot lead where the neutral goes, and let the smoke out of my generator head. I have not opened it up to see the damage yet, but I bet there is atleast a fried rectifier or voltage regulator. I have yet to find a local place (SE Louisiana, near New Orleans), that will even look at it. Most generator companies here work on large units on ships, boats and oil production platforms. This thing is a toy to them and it's also not even worth what most would want for 2-3 hours of labor.
If I go ahead and remove the end cap of the generator head and start diagnosing this thing myself, what should I look for other than obvious physical and thermal damage?
Well long story short (no pun intended here), my dad wired it up wrong to the 220V plug before hooking into his breaker box. Put a hot lead where the neutral goes, and let the smoke out of my generator head. I have not opened it up to see the damage yet, but I bet there is atleast a fried rectifier or voltage regulator. I have yet to find a local place (SE Louisiana, near New Orleans), that will even look at it. Most generator companies here work on large units on ships, boats and oil production platforms. This thing is a toy to them and it's also not even worth what most would want for 2-3 hours of labor.
If I go ahead and remove the end cap of the generator head and start diagnosing this thing myself, what should I look for other than obvious physical and thermal damage?
Didn't say anything of the sort. Just suggesting he find someone or a shop that has an insulation tester, and that's a pretty standard model to find. Nothing to get worked up about.