healhustler
Guru
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2009
- Messages
- 5,198
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Bucky
- Vessel Make
- Krogen Manatee 36 North Sea
After 11 years of repairing, rebuilding, relocating, reinstalling and removing my Northern Lights 5KW generator, I had to yank it again 6 months ago after learning that the last bad hurricane must have backed up water through the exhaust and flooded the cylinders. She froze.
After busting it loose, I was having one of the cylinders bored and sleaved to bring it back to original tolerances when the guy got real sick and the genset block has been sitting there all this time, undone, a day’s drive away and no outlook for finishing it up.
I called the guy today and his situation (already serious) is just getting worse. I thought over these months that I should just pick the thing up and look for a machine shop closer to home, the finish the reassembly myself, but the parts are everywhere and the head is also unfinished. The odd bolts are scattered. The only thing that sickens me more is having to deal with that fragmented mess and then ending up with the same machine I have never been able to depend on for a single overnight anchorage.
I cut it loose. I gave up. That generator has cost me so much money and frustration all these years that having it back, or having ANY generator for that matter, is not going to be part of my boating future.
I cleared my pilothouse roof 8 years ago for 1200 watts of solar (2000 watts will fit now) and all I’ve done is procrastinate while the cost of panels, controllers & battery systems have plunged to the point that I can no longer justify waiting. Living in Florida makes it even more so.
The way we use our boat, 2000 watts and a sizable LiFePo-4 battery bank will take care of everything with no noise and no moving parts. The things I needed 110 for, like tools, fridge, hot water (engine heated) and overnight stateroom A/C are all manageable now. Emergency starts of main engine can be handled by compact jump-start devices. Am I missing something?
After busting it loose, I was having one of the cylinders bored and sleaved to bring it back to original tolerances when the guy got real sick and the genset block has been sitting there all this time, undone, a day’s drive away and no outlook for finishing it up.
I called the guy today and his situation (already serious) is just getting worse. I thought over these months that I should just pick the thing up and look for a machine shop closer to home, the finish the reassembly myself, but the parts are everywhere and the head is also unfinished. The odd bolts are scattered. The only thing that sickens me more is having to deal with that fragmented mess and then ending up with the same machine I have never been able to depend on for a single overnight anchorage.
I cut it loose. I gave up. That generator has cost me so much money and frustration all these years that having it back, or having ANY generator for that matter, is not going to be part of my boating future.
I cleared my pilothouse roof 8 years ago for 1200 watts of solar (2000 watts will fit now) and all I’ve done is procrastinate while the cost of panels, controllers & battery systems have plunged to the point that I can no longer justify waiting. Living in Florida makes it even more so.
The way we use our boat, 2000 watts and a sizable LiFePo-4 battery bank will take care of everything with no noise and no moving parts. The things I needed 110 for, like tools, fridge, hot water (engine heated) and overnight stateroom A/C are all manageable now. Emergency starts of main engine can be handled by compact jump-start devices. Am I missing something?