MChalkley
Elite Member
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2000
- Messages
- 3,198
- Location
- Eastern Virginia
- Tractor
- EarthForce EF-5 mini-TLB (2001)
Here's a little mystery for you old equipment detectives out there (and one you'll hopefully find a little interesting - it's been fascinating so far, to me):
After hurricane Isabel, our power was out for 10 days and the little 6500-watt generator I had was unable to cope, so I decided to work on getting a real generator. I really wanted a diesel-powered one in the 20kw or so range, but didn't have $8k to drop on one, so I started scrounging. I found an old GE 25kw generator at a local junkyard, and bought it for the generator head, assured only that the it should be salvageable - the dealer told me he was pretty sure the engine was beyond hope and the voltage regulator definitely was. I was planning to put a used 37-hp Isuzu diesel on it, anyway, so the engine was going to be discarded. Then when I got to looking at the engine, it intrigued me, so I started doing some checking and found it was made in February, 1956, a Continental FA244. It had been converted to natural gas (no carburetor), had a stuck valve, a blown head gasket, no oil filter, etc.
I won't attempt to describe the many many hours I put into this thing, but the good news is that the engine runs almost perfectly. I still need to find a distributor cap for it, replace the points, and make up some plug wires, etc., but it runs beautifully, considering. There's a dozen other things that need to be done to it, choke and throttle cables, and the like, but all in all, it's amazing that it's doing as well as it is. The original voltage regulator was toast, so I had to buy a new solid state one, and the generator had to be re-wired for single phase instead of three phase, but all that's working, too. I actually put a 97-amp 240-volt load on it (10kw from a generator test unit and all four burners and the oven from an electric range) and ran it for almost an hour - nothing smoked and the generator never got too warm to hold your hand on it, voltage only varied 5 volts or so, and frequency only varied a couple hertz, so I sure can't complain about the output capability of the unit.
Anyway, here's the mystery: I can't find any info on the generator itself. Based on what little I know about 50's electrical devices, I don't think it's that old, but I'd like to find out. The generator is directly coupled to the flywheel of the engine, and the whole works is mounted on a cast base that must weigh 1000 pounds, so it sure looks like it's a unit built like that and not jury-rigged, but I can't help feeling the generator is newer than the engine, maybe late 60's or early 70's. Here's most of the info from the data plate on the generator: General Electric, Model 5SJ432A21Y10, Type SJ, Frame 324U, Serial #275277420, 1800 rpm, 25kw, 31.25 kva, PF .8, Encl DP, 3 phase, 240/480 volts. Does any of this info mean anything to anybody here? There's also some info on "temp rise" that I don't have recorded, but I can get it if there's anybody here that could translate it for me.
This thing is my pet project right now, so if anybody has any other info on the generator or engine, I'd sure appreciate it. Does anybody have any idea how many gph this thing will suck under, say, half load? Does anybody here have any experience with this particular engine? (I know, for example, that Ferguson, Massey Harris, and some Case tractors, as well as a whole slew of forklifts, etc. used Continental/Red Seal engines, but that's about all.) I did find a shop manual for the engine online, so that was a big bonus. (I'll tell you one thing: This engine is sure put together - I've never seen 33 head bolts on a straight six engine before... /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif)
After hurricane Isabel, our power was out for 10 days and the little 6500-watt generator I had was unable to cope, so I decided to work on getting a real generator. I really wanted a diesel-powered one in the 20kw or so range, but didn't have $8k to drop on one, so I started scrounging. I found an old GE 25kw generator at a local junkyard, and bought it for the generator head, assured only that the it should be salvageable - the dealer told me he was pretty sure the engine was beyond hope and the voltage regulator definitely was. I was planning to put a used 37-hp Isuzu diesel on it, anyway, so the engine was going to be discarded. Then when I got to looking at the engine, it intrigued me, so I started doing some checking and found it was made in February, 1956, a Continental FA244. It had been converted to natural gas (no carburetor), had a stuck valve, a blown head gasket, no oil filter, etc.
I won't attempt to describe the many many hours I put into this thing, but the good news is that the engine runs almost perfectly. I still need to find a distributor cap for it, replace the points, and make up some plug wires, etc., but it runs beautifully, considering. There's a dozen other things that need to be done to it, choke and throttle cables, and the like, but all in all, it's amazing that it's doing as well as it is. The original voltage regulator was toast, so I had to buy a new solid state one, and the generator had to be re-wired for single phase instead of three phase, but all that's working, too. I actually put a 97-amp 240-volt load on it (10kw from a generator test unit and all four burners and the oven from an electric range) and ran it for almost an hour - nothing smoked and the generator never got too warm to hold your hand on it, voltage only varied 5 volts or so, and frequency only varied a couple hertz, so I sure can't complain about the output capability of the unit.
Anyway, here's the mystery: I can't find any info on the generator itself. Based on what little I know about 50's electrical devices, I don't think it's that old, but I'd like to find out. The generator is directly coupled to the flywheel of the engine, and the whole works is mounted on a cast base that must weigh 1000 pounds, so it sure looks like it's a unit built like that and not jury-rigged, but I can't help feeling the generator is newer than the engine, maybe late 60's or early 70's. Here's most of the info from the data plate on the generator: General Electric, Model 5SJ432A21Y10, Type SJ, Frame 324U, Serial #275277420, 1800 rpm, 25kw, 31.25 kva, PF .8, Encl DP, 3 phase, 240/480 volts. Does any of this info mean anything to anybody here? There's also some info on "temp rise" that I don't have recorded, but I can get it if there's anybody here that could translate it for me.
This thing is my pet project right now, so if anybody has any other info on the generator or engine, I'd sure appreciate it. Does anybody have any idea how many gph this thing will suck under, say, half load? Does anybody here have any experience with this particular engine? (I know, for example, that Ferguson, Massey Harris, and some Case tractors, as well as a whole slew of forklifts, etc. used Continental/Red Seal engines, but that's about all.) I did find a shop manual for the engine online, so that was a big bonus. (I'll tell you one thing: This engine is sure put together - I've never seen 33 head bolts on a straight six engine before... /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif)