Sababa
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 23, 2022
- Messages
- 401
- Vessel Name
- Sababa
- Vessel Make
- Maritimo 52
My 6kw Northern Lights generator is putting out soot and gray smoke when I load it up. It’s original to my 2001 Nordic Tug and had only around 200 hours on it when I bought the boat in 2020. The generator was not running then and in pretty bad shape from barely having been used over the years. I had pretty much everything replaced—injectors, lift pump, fuel return valve, exhaust elbow, you name it. It ran great and still does under moderate loads. But since then, I’ve added a bigger (3kw) inverter charger and a small water maker that draws about 1200 watts and I’ve noticed that when I load it up with these plus the hot water heater it puts out gray smoke through the dry exhaust and soot through the wet exhaust. Even so, the generator runs smoothly and the temperature is pegged at a normal 195 degrees.
Among the potential causes that the manual identifies for this, the only ones I haven’t already addressed are engine timing and too much muffler back pressure. These seem unlikely to me, though, since the generator is running smoothly apart from the smoke and soot.
I’ve seen people say that this can be normal carbon burning off from a generator that was previously run infrequently and/or at low loads, and that the best thing I can do is to continue to load it up and let it clear itself out. If that’s so, I’d like to do it as much as I can while I am cruising. But I’m concerned that I may be doing some harm and that maybe I should run it at lighter loads where it doesn’t produce smoke and soot until I can get it looked at.
Any thoughts out there?
Among the potential causes that the manual identifies for this, the only ones I haven’t already addressed are engine timing and too much muffler back pressure. These seem unlikely to me, though, since the generator is running smoothly apart from the smoke and soot.
I’ve seen people say that this can be normal carbon burning off from a generator that was previously run infrequently and/or at low loads, and that the best thing I can do is to continue to load it up and let it clear itself out. If that’s so, I’d like to do it as much as I can while I am cruising. But I’m concerned that I may be doing some harm and that maybe I should run it at lighter loads where it doesn’t produce smoke and soot until I can get it looked at.
Any thoughts out there?