Bert:
The best source of info on Onans that i know of is Bruce Perrault of Precise Engine Repair. He had something like 40 yrs of experience with them before he retired a few years ago. He used to sponsor a small engine repair forum where you could ask questions but i don't know if it's still up. The closest link i could find to get you in contact with him was this:
Wildflowers Home - Central Washington Wildflowers
Gawd .... those old ONAN's were wonderful machines. Real honest to gosh American quality built for continuous duty use. Not at all like the emergency service crap that they're building these days.
Sadly .... they're something from a bygone era. They have huge sentimental value but they're obsolete in this day & age. There are four problems:
1: Even though they were of incredible quality & built to last forever there's no money in selling obsolete parts. When Cummings bought out ONAN for the name they quickly distanced themselves selling parts & shifted manufacturing to China. From what i've heard it's difficult to get repair parts through them.
2: As wonderful as they are they just don't meet the clean air -or- noise standards of today. That would be particularly so where you are because Cali is known for extremism on environmental quality standards.
3: The ONANs were built in a day and age when oil was cheap. Gasoline was only 25 cents a gallon and nobody gave a second thought to energy efficiency. Engine designs have come a long way since then.
Cost to operate is a major consideration. You're talking serious bucks to run a little 5kw twentyfour/seven for a week or more during an outage. Your local city ordinances might not allow you to store enough fuel to keep it running for more than half a day. Best guess is that it would suck through 1 GPH at 75% load. At 3.00 $/gallon it would probably cost somewhere around 60.00$ a day for electricity.
4: Check your 220 outlet on the machine. There's probably two hots and a ground ? ( 3 prongs total)
Electrical codes changed sometime back around y2k. Today's standard is four wire. ( 4 prongs total) I think they added a requirement for a safety neutral ? You might run into some hassles with the building inspector if you tried to hook it up to your house. Depends on how stringent they are where you live.
All around .... a lot of things to deal with when putting it back into service ?
Edited to add:
Memory was vague because it's been awhile but you want to check the voltage output on each of the 110 volt legs if you can get the generator running. I think they need to be within 5 % of one another ? It's been so long that i've mostly forgotten but there was a procedure for adjusting the output of each leg on some of the ONANs. It would help if you could locate a service manual for that particular model.
Also ... verify that it's running at 60 hertz and not 50 hertz. Should say somewhere on the metal tag that lists the model # & specs of the generator.
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