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The warning in the manual is for the carbon monoxide and to keep you
from suing them if you do what they tell you not to...... The enclosure has a big outlet where the heat comes out the end of the genset and two intakes, one in the bottom and one near the bottom on the end with the outlets. The plastic doesn't even get as warm as it would sitting in the sun being eaten alive by the UV rays from the sunshine. It runs 8 hours a day on the road all summer in a modified tool box bolted to the back door it just fits in. It's cooler in the cabinet than in the sun because of the volume of air the blower in it creates.... Operating in the van, in winter, the only end that gets warm is where the hot air comes out of it to heat my truck. I'd guess doing this recovers near 95% of the energy of the consumed fuel. Too bad boats don't use Deutz air-cooled diesels. You could dump the heat overboard in the summer around the dry stack and divert it into the cabin in winter to recover the waste heat with a thermostatically-controlled shutter to regulate its cabin temperature through a muffler to block the noise. I had Deutz V-16 engines driving 200KW gensets in Iran and they were fantastic engines, even running where the OAT was over 100F all day long! One injector clogged in 2 years and that was our fault some idiot put the filter in wrong. Change the oil every 150 hours and she'd just run and run 24/7/365 On 13 Jan 2004 21:51:56 -0800, (Mark) wrote: (Larry W4CSC) wrote My shop heater in winter is a 1KW Honda EU1000i power plant. I welded a pipe nipple on the little exhaust port . . . Hmm. The manual that came with my EU1000i went to great lengths in several languages to *don't do that*! I suppose if the length was short, not too restrictive, not near flammable materials, it could work. Its quiet enclosure . . . hidden away behind the cabinets. Hmm, The EU1000i wasn't designed to operate in an enclosure, might be hard on the plastic parts. Although big ventilation grates might make such an installation viable. Of course, restricting the exhaust with a long length of tubing and letting the generator recycle a good dose of it's own (hot) cooling air would just make it work harder and produce *more* heat g. |
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