Gary Greathouse wrote:the code is 80 12 05, Sory it took so long to get back has been a BZ week lol. Well I got it running great the only prob is the gov. It only works part of the time under a load, I noticed the spring looks a little stretched could that be the prob? I already adjusted the static and changed the spring around to diff holes with no luck lol. Any ideas? When first put under a load it stays at idle for about 30 seconds then to about 1/4 throttle for 5 sec. and back to idle and repeat.
Sounds like what we call a surge. You need a tachometer, or considering it is a generator, a hertz meter
when nothing plugged in on it, should be around 3750 RPM, or about 62 Hz at 120v output, unless an auto idle is present. when under a load, should be around 3600 RPM or 60Hz output (assuming this is a North America application - U.K. needs 50Hz, so RPMS would be slower)
Once you got that set, if it is still doing as you describe (surging) that is usually indicative of a fuel starvation issue. If you get the RPM set right after a static governor adjustment, should not be a governor issue. - way to tell is to put a finger on the throttle lever and hold it in place to keep it from moving, and see if the engine starts to die out or sputter or not run smoothly - if it does the problem is not the governor, but if it runs fine when holding throttle steady, you have some sort of governor issue - changing the location of the hole the spring hooks in the governor arm is just changing the sensitivity (Governor droop)
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)