grsthegreat
Super Star Member
I can fully back this statement. Nearly every issue i get called on for a standby not starting revolves around fuel issues. Alot of time its bad installation issues such as the wrong sized regulator or undersized fuel lines. This winter ive seen a few that refused to start because the fuel regulators were buried in snow. probably froze the valving inside unit. I repaired one unit because a heating contractor moved the generator to make room for a larger heat pump, and kinked the fuel line. The guy had 2 different techs come and look at the unit, and both threw parts at it and didnt fix the issue. first thing i noticed was a crushed fuel line and a propane regulator off of a BBQ unit. Heres a generator sucking down 225,000 BTU being fed off a 85,000 btu regulator. I felt bad for the guy.The main issue with propane or natural gas for generators is both these fuels have a very narrow air/fuel ratio in which they will run so any problem at all with fuel delivery or adjustment will cause hunting or make it nearly impossible to start. Gaseous fuel engines are extremely sensitive to intake leaks for this reason. This is the reason nearly all complaints you see for every brand of Nat Gas home standby generator revolve around intermittent no start or instability. They are finicky, particularly now that they need to meet tighter emissions.
If you’re handy and have no problem making adjustments this isn’t a huge issue but something that requires ongoing tweaking isn’t practical for the Mrs when I’m not home to deal with it.
Gasoline is much more tolerant and apart from choking to start will run a wide range of mixture with little effect on stability. Storage is an issue though, propane has a nearly unlimited storage life since there is virtually no oxygen contained in the tanks.
My own propane unit has fired up every week without issue for past 3 years. I have battery and oil heat kits on the unit.