caiman
Well-Known Member
When you've got it up and running properly,can I have 'first refusal' if you decide to sell it please?
Cheers
Cheers
Back to generators (please) The Mase used an electro-mechanical throttle control. There was a black pot on the carb that used a tapping of one of gen coils to excite an electro magnet connected to the butterfly. Little knob on top could fine tune it with reference to the voltmeter for 220. An ampermeter did the job for 12/24v. Presumable by altering the tension on the balance spring.( I never looked in the pot)
Again probably too complex for a one off, but?
A
matt
Please keep posting on here. This is one of the most interesting and innovative threads for ages. It is giving interest and pleasure to many of us. Don't be deterred by one or two peeps with bees in their bonnets.
sorry to throw a dampener on the proceedings, number 1 is that car alternators run approx 3 times as fast as the engine, so the direct coupling idea wont spin it fast enough
I know I know.I'm not sure he has a problem with that, Vic
I know I know.
You only had to look up the specs for the alternator and the engine to realise that. Car alternators are speeded up from crankshaft speed but that gives decent charging rates at slow speeds.
Unfortunately the drive coupling has just broken (need the next size up!) so its out of action until a new one arrives, but will post some more vids and pictures very soon.
What sort of life are you hoping to get from the engine? Some engines are designed to run for most of the time well below maximum power - so a 100hp car engine, for example, will spend much of its life punting out the 30hp or so needed for bimbling along at 70 and very little overtaking at high revs and maximum power.
I wonder how long Honda design this one to run at full power?
Matt seems now to be looking at a 20A output as being reasonably attainable (and his battery bank might not be able to absorb much more than that for long periods). So that's not going to involve full power running. Honda's service schedule for the engine talks in terms of "every 2 years or 300 hours", and I'd have thought for leisure boat use 150 hours of charging a year would be a lot.
...could you possibly post some details/pics of your "Water cooled exhaust"? Looking at someone else's solution to this one might help with a project I have in mind.
Chas