Charles (in GA)
Well-known member
About a year ago, a co-worker asked if I knew anyone who might want to buy a generator. As I'd had it in the back of my mind for a while, I told him I might be interested. Turns out the generator was a Northern Tools NorthStar 10 hp Yanmar diesel powered 6500 watt unit. He had acquired it from someone who was getting divorced and needed to liquidate some stuff and my co-worker is somewhat of a wheeler dealer. The generator, from the date stamps on the motor and fuel hoses and other items, appeared to have been made in 2003 or 2004 and was still wrapped in plastic, never having had fuel or oil in it. His wife was after him to get it out of the garage, and since he had a generator he had been using, he was willing to sell it.
I went to his house and loaded it up, and then set out to install a generator interlock on my Square D circuit breaker panel and an inlet connection under the back porch.
After doing some searching and looking on Ebay, and searching some Square D documents I found they made a couple of different interlocks for various model panels. I ended up with the QOCGK2C interlock for my 200 amp main breaker panel. I think I paid $52 or somewhere thereabouts with shipping. So after a trip to Home Depot to get a 30 amp breaker, I opened the panel and had to move a few breakers to free up the two spaces on the upper right side, and drilled the front and installed the interlock and breaker. Then I set about mounting a Reliance generator inlet box with a L14-30 connector in it, under my screened in redneck back porch. Supposedly the degree of redneck that the porch is, is determined by how many dogs would be killed when it collapsed
In any case, I mounted the box, ran some 3/4 PVC conduit along one of the floor joist of the porch, and stopped... for the winter. Recently I got around to drilling the foundation block to run the conduit into my crawlspace. I used the largest masonry bit I had for my drill, then the largest star drill I had and opened it up by hand drilling with the star bit and masonry hammer. Finally a trip to the local hardware to get a larger star drill and finished the job. My hammer hand hurt for days after that!!!
I am at the point now that I need to run the NM 10/3 w/grd and hook it up and I'll be finished.
Charles
I went to his house and loaded it up, and then set out to install a generator interlock on my Square D circuit breaker panel and an inlet connection under the back porch.
After doing some searching and looking on Ebay, and searching some Square D documents I found they made a couple of different interlocks for various model panels. I ended up with the QOCGK2C interlock for my 200 amp main breaker panel. I think I paid $52 or somewhere thereabouts with shipping. So after a trip to Home Depot to get a 30 amp breaker, I opened the panel and had to move a few breakers to free up the two spaces on the upper right side, and drilled the front and installed the interlock and breaker. Then I set about mounting a Reliance generator inlet box with a L14-30 connector in it, under my screened in redneck back porch. Supposedly the degree of redneck that the porch is, is determined by how many dogs would be killed when it collapsed
In any case, I mounted the box, ran some 3/4 PVC conduit along one of the floor joist of the porch, and stopped... for the winter. Recently I got around to drilling the foundation block to run the conduit into my crawlspace. I used the largest masonry bit I had for my drill, then the largest star drill I had and opened it up by hand drilling with the star bit and masonry hammer. Finally a trip to the local hardware to get a larger star drill and finished the job. My hammer hand hurt for days after that!!!I am at the point now that I need to run the NM 10/3 w/grd and hook it up and I'll be finished.
Charles
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. Was glad to have found it when I did, and not when I needed the genny powering the house. I ended up splicing the Romex in a junction box under the house, using tiny split bolts and lots of 3M tape.