Aldi £59 petrol generator and television

empty vessels....

-- To people who know nothing, anything is possible. To people who know too much, it is a sad fact that they know how little is really possible - and how hard it is to achieve it.

Reply to
The Natural Philosopher
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gregz wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@news.eternal-september.o rg:

your fridge may draw it's 200 watts once the compressor motor is running,but on startup,it draws a lot more.

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Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com
Reply to
Jim Yanik

Tim Streater wrote in news:timstreater- snipped-for-privacy@news.individual.net:

why does anyone respond to them? this is what killfiles are for.

--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com
Reply to
Jim Yanik

The oscilloscope photos in the URL's mentioned show the output waveforms with and without loads. As I indicated, and you apparently missed, it is NOT necessary to have an unbalanced load on the generator in order to produce a distorted waveform. Also, it's a fair assumption that this 800 watt generator is going to be powering more than one device while camping. Besides the TV, there might be some lamps, a laptop charger, satellite TV receiver, smartphone charger, inkjet printer, and all the conveniences of portable modern living. In general, the generator waveforms become more distorted with increased load.

As I previously suggested, some substantiation would be helpful. If you had impeccable credentials, were a recognized authority, had previously demonstrated expertise in this area, and perhaps were a Nobel Prize recipient, I might accept your unsubstantiated judgments without question. However, lacking those requirements, and being apparently only able to produce one-line erroneous statements of negligible value, you do not qualify. Please explain why numerous articles on generator to UPS compatibility should be ignored.

In the past odd 20 years, I've run emergency generator versus switching power supply problems many times. My favorite was while working with computahs at a medical billing office. Someone dragged in a Genrac 8kw(?) generator and wired it to a transfer box. It was a professionally done installation by a licensed electrician. I stupidly suggested we do a dry run with the building on full power, and was immediately assigned the task. The day arrived, the big switch was thrown, the generator started immediately, and about 30 assorted UPS backup power supplies beeped a few times, and shut down in self defense. That powered down all the servers and network hardware, which effectively shut down the network.

On the APC SmartUPS line (as opposed to the BackUPS line), there is a switch to reduce the sensitivity to input waveform distortion. We went around flipping switches and rebooting servers (after a 30 minutes file system check). When everything was back up and running, the power was again switched off, and again all the UPS's shut down.

I drove to my palatial office and back with an oscilloscope to look at the waveform. Even without a load, it looked something like this:

When I added all the non-computer loads to the Genrac generator, the waveform became asymmetrical, because the load was not balanced between the two phases. My clamp-on ammeter showed about 10A on one leg and 7A on the other. It didn't take much to cause problems.

After about 8 power fail simulations, we were never able to bring everything back up gracefully on generator power. It wasn't just the UPS's that were having issues. The DVR for the security camera systems refused to run. The wall warts for powering some Netgear switches blew up and had to be replaced. Several CRT monitors acted strangely and refused to produce a stable display. The Lucent phone system would go into protection mode intermittently.

After the exercise was over, I elected to restore two of the servers from backup tapes, because I didn't want to take the chance that all the power thrashing had caused any data corruption. That took most of the night. When business resumed on Monday, it was soon discovered that the one server that I did NOT restore, had some minor data corruption.

There was no way the office was going to run on this 6kw(?) generator. The generator was removed, permits arranged, and a rather monstrous and expensive 25kw diesel generator was installed. Attached to the power leads was a large box full of low pass filter components to remove spikes. I didn't need to look at the waveforms as it ran the various UPS devices and switching power supplies perfectly.

You don't know what I know.

True. You haven't learned anything. I judge people by their willingness and abilities to learn. You fail both criteria.

A while ago, I attempted to classify various usenet personality types.

At the time, I hadn't even considered a classification suitable for your style. You post useless and erroneous comments, and then wait for those with some understanding of the topic to correct your misinformation. The more attention you attract, the more useless comments you produce, resulting in a positive feedback mechanism. I suspect that your primary purpose is to attract corrective attention, rather than answer the questions or debate the validity of the proposed explanations. Had you demonstrated some understanding of the topic by asking some intelligent questions, I might consider continuing, but as it stands, I have no interest in entertaining you or cleaning up your mess. Good day.

--
Jeff Liebermann     jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D    http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann     AE6KS    831-336-2558
Reply to
Jeff Liebermann

Er Jeff, this is Rod Speed, ultimate Internet idiot par excellence you are addressing.

Don't waste our bandwidth,.

--
To people who know nothing, anything is possible.
To people who know too much, it is a sad fact
that they know how little is really possible -
and how hard it is to achieve it.
Reply to
The Natural Philosopher

Curiosity. I'm somewhat of an amateur psychologist. I like to see what motivates people and how they think. That's difficult to do with only one-line pontifications so I primed the pump with some content to see if some intelligence might gush forth from the depths. Apparently not. So, with my curiousity thus satisfied, I now return to the mundane tasks of fixing things, tilting at windmills, and raising the dead.

--
Jeff Liebermann     jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D    http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann     AE6KS    831-336-2558
Reply to
Jeff Liebermann

Jeff Liebermann wrote

Yes, but you don't in fact get anything like the distortion that you were going on about with unbalanced loads on

2 phase generators which aren't even relevant to the particular generator and load being discussed.

Didn't miss anything. The distortion actually seen with the particular generator and load being discussed is nothing like enough to be a problem with a well designed SMPS.

Yes, but that's not necessarily much of a load.

None of which are much of a load.

Duh. But even with all of those you listed, it won't be a problem for a well designed SMPS.

You didn't provide any of that yourself until I rubbed your nose in the fact that you never provided any yourself on your claim about how SMPSs fail.

You in spades with your claim about how SMPSs fail.

Because we arent discussing UPSs, we are discussing TVs instead.

Completely and utterly irrelevant to what was being discussed, that PARTICULAR generator mentioned in the subject and a TV.

Completely and utterly irrelevant to what was being discussed, that PARTICULAR generator mentioned in the subject and a TV.

All completely and utterly irrelevant to what was being discussed, that PARTICULAR generator mentioned in the subject and a TV.

I do know that you were rabbiting on about two phase generators and UPSs that have NOTHING to do with what the OP asked about.

Yep, none of the irrelevant shit you posted is any news to me.

No one give a flying red f*ck how you stupidly 'judge' people.

Particularly when you keep raving on about about situations that have NOTHING to do with what was actually being discussed.

Everyone can see for themselves that you are lying.

Reply to
Rod Speed

Alas you are wasting effort arguing with woddles - the most clue resistant poster uk.d-i-y has known...

While the evidence would suggest otherwise, logic suggests that he can't actually be totally stupid, because to be so consistently wrong on every single one of the many topics he is willing to submit his opinion, must actually take some considerable effort. Most clueless twonks actually get the right answer by accident sometimes.

--
Cheers,

John.

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|        John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk              |
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Reply to
John Rumm

Sounds like I have have to do a test with my two generators. One small single out. One double output, 240 max. Get back later.

Greg

Reply to
gregz

I have 3 generators, none of which work. I dragged them home with the intention of repairing them, and never found the time. Although I didn't do this, you could add 10K resistors between the 10:1 probe tips and the AC line connections, without trashing the waveform.

Good luck and please be careful.

Eaton's PSEC - Harmonics (5 min) The first few minutes show waveforms comparing a linear load (light bulb) and a non-linear load (switcher). Note the comments on overheating and harmonics.

--
Jeff Liebermann     jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D    http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann     AE6KS    831-336-2558
Reply to
Jeff Liebermann

I'm thinking I have X10 probes, but thanks. I would rather use a two channel batter scope, but I don't have one. Then again, 8 bit resolution crap.

Greg

Reply to
gregz

I can't imagine a 2 stroke aldi generator would even last long enough to destroy any electronics. the thing must last about 2-3 minutes tops before seizing, assuming it even starts out of the box.

Reply to
Cydrome Leader

That'll be why they give a three year warranty? Instant money back - provided you have the receipt. Wish others did as well.

--
*If only you'd use your powers for good instead of evil.

    Dave Plowman        dave@davenoise.co.uk           London SW
                  To e-mail, change noise into sound.
Reply to
Dave Plowman (News)

it could be a 100 year warranty. There's no way such a generator isn't complete trash and won't have the endurance of a birthday cake candle.

Reply to
Cydrome Leader

We have a local iced cream truck that rides around through the park at various parts of the day. It has one of those hanging on the back, operating the freezer I presume. It seems to work for them just fine, sounds funny though ;)

Jamie

Reply to
Jamie

That one tells jokes? I'll get me coat.

Reply to
brass monkey

I can't vouch for their 2 stroke model but I do own an Aldi 4 stroke generator that has served me well for 8 years. It doesn't come out often but when it does it performs faultlessly. It powers everything in the house (not all at the same time) during power outages, runs power tools away from the mains, and lighting and PA equipment at an annual outdoor event. The longest daily use was 7 years ago when we had no power for 5 days, it ran approx. 18 hours a day every day.

Mike

Reply to
Muddymike

I dunno anything about the Aldi one but several years ago I bought a cheap 2 stroke, 800w, made-in-china one from Menards for $100 or less and it's still working fine.

We had a nasty ice storm, lost power and after the house dropped to 60, it was either do something or find a hotel.

It chugged along for hours sitting outside in 20F degree temps, we have hot water gas heat so it only needed to run the circulation pump. Just did a quick mod to the electrical on the furnace and ran a heavy guage cord thru a drilled hole in the wall.

Since then I've used it several times, usually starts on the 3rd or 4th pull, even after sitting a year or more, stale gas and everything that goes with it.

Don't get me wrong, contruction wise it's a peice of crap but seems to be hanging in there just fine.

If I lived in an area that has regular outages, this thing wouldn't be in my top 10 list (or top 100) but for the occasional use and price, it's just not as bad as you think.

-bruce snipped-for-privacy@ripco.com

Reply to
Bruce Esquibel

So you lack a grasp of reality. Reliable 2 cycle engines are quite common - they have been used in chain saws, outboard motors, and a variety of other uses for more than half a century. The chief cause of premature failure is some idiot (look in to a mirror for an example) failing to properly mix the oil and gas.

The generator (actually an alternator) is also trivial. By incorporating a small permanent magnet into the rotor it would be trivial to build a self-energizing alternator; output voltage regulation would be done by stepping the output voltage down, rectifying it, and varying the current to the rotor windings, just as is done in an automotive alternator. That output voltage should be quite stable.

Admitedly, frequency regulation would be poor. They probably use an air vane governor for speed regulation.

As far as the original question, I wouldn't suggest anyone try to use one for any application the manufacturer says is unsuitable. But I would be more concerned about the unstable frequency than the output voltage. I've seen many LCD monitors whose power supply is rated for input voltages ranging from 90 to 275 volts AC at 50 - 60 Hz.

PlainBill

Reply to
PlainBill

This sounds like the one sold by Harbor Freight Tools.

PlainBill

Reply to
PlainBill

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