Jagmandave
Well-known member
I have a Generac that's rated at 7000 watts @ 120V, 12,250 surge......so that's just about 60 amps, 30 amps @240 V normal running, right?
Should be more than enough to run my whole house I figured......
Here's my question....
It has several different places to plug into the main panel on the genset - a 30 amp -120V 3 prong twistlock, a 30 amp 120/240 4 prong twistlock, and one double 120V receptacle.
View media item 51587
We had a terrible storm two days ago and haven't had power since, I wired up a three prong 30 amp 240V plug on a pigtail and put it in the receptacle for my garage A/C unit to feed my main panel (Yes, I disconnected from the grid by opening the main breaker)
It easily runs everything I need in the house, including a small window A/C in the bedroom so we could sleep at night.
But, even with everything else turned off, it would not run the whole house A/C, which is also on a 30 240V amp breaker, instead it tripped one leg's circuit breaker on the genset . I assume the inrush current needed to start the compressor was just more than it could handle, even tho the loads seemed matched OK (30 amp 240V supply, 30 amp 240 draw) and it has surge capability of over 50 amps on 240V.
I reset the circuit breaker on the genset and went back to only running the 120V stuff (including 2 refrigerators, the window A/C, all the lights, computers, TV etc. and it's been going fine for 2 days now. The only things that make it draw down momentarily are when the compressor cycles on in the window A/C and when she fires up the coffee maker - and that's only a momentary thing.
Does this sound like what happened to you guys? Why wouldn't it handle that load? The main A/C is on a 30 amp 240 breaker, so it doesn't draw that much or it would trip that breaker too, right? What do you electrically smart guys think? The pigtail was made with 3 conductor 10 ga SO cord, the wires from the receptacle to the main panel are also 10 ga.
Should be more than enough to run my whole house I figured......
Here's my question....
It has several different places to plug into the main panel on the genset - a 30 amp -120V 3 prong twistlock, a 30 amp 120/240 4 prong twistlock, and one double 120V receptacle.
View media item 51587
We had a terrible storm two days ago and haven't had power since, I wired up a three prong 30 amp 240V plug on a pigtail and put it in the receptacle for my garage A/C unit to feed my main panel (Yes, I disconnected from the grid by opening the main breaker)
It easily runs everything I need in the house, including a small window A/C in the bedroom so we could sleep at night.
But, even with everything else turned off, it would not run the whole house A/C, which is also on a 30 240V amp breaker, instead it tripped one leg's circuit breaker on the genset . I assume the inrush current needed to start the compressor was just more than it could handle, even tho the loads seemed matched OK (30 amp 240V supply, 30 amp 240 draw) and it has surge capability of over 50 amps on 240V.
I reset the circuit breaker on the genset and went back to only running the 120V stuff (including 2 refrigerators, the window A/C, all the lights, computers, TV etc. and it's been going fine for 2 days now. The only things that make it draw down momentarily are when the compressor cycles on in the window A/C and when she fires up the coffee maker - and that's only a momentary thing.
Does this sound like what happened to you guys? Why wouldn't it handle that load? The main A/C is on a 30 amp 240 breaker, so it doesn't draw that much or it would trip that breaker too, right? What do you electrically smart guys think? The pigtail was made with 3 conductor 10 ga SO cord, the wires from the receptacle to the main panel are also 10 ga.
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