Chilliwack Murray
Gold Member
Simplicity is king when it comes to reliability. Over the last dozen years complexity of engines, controls and emissions has increased several fold and reliability has suffered.
Standby gensets that are properly maintained had a 30-40 year service life if they were decent quality to begin with but I can without a doubt that is not the case anymore. Nobody will be supporting the complex controls on modern engines more than 10 or 15 years out - it’s really not even possible. Take for example software required to service or repair an engine from 2005. It would have run on Win ME or XP and will not run on any PC you can buy today and the rate of change is only accelerating.
It used to be simple to update a control and still is fairly easy to swap a controller and tie into the CANBus control network but ECMs that actually run the engines are proprietary and cannot be replaced with anything generic. When they go obsolete for anything but the most common engines you will have scrap metal.
The mindset of technicians now is also to replace anything that’s more than 5 or 10 years old rather than attempt a repair, I see it first hand regularly. It provides bells and whistles like emails but little or nothing for reliability or longevity.
Standby gensets that are properly maintained had a 30-40 year service life if they were decent quality to begin with but I can without a doubt that is not the case anymore. Nobody will be supporting the complex controls on modern engines more than 10 or 15 years out - it’s really not even possible. Take for example software required to service or repair an engine from 2005. It would have run on Win ME or XP and will not run on any PC you can buy today and the rate of change is only accelerating.
It used to be simple to update a control and still is fairly easy to swap a controller and tie into the CANBus control network but ECMs that actually run the engines are proprietary and cannot be replaced with anything generic. When they go obsolete for anything but the most common engines you will have scrap metal.
The mindset of technicians now is also to replace anything that’s more than 5 or 10 years old rather than attempt a repair, I see it first hand regularly. It provides bells and whistles like emails but little or nothing for reliability or longevity.