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Registered
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: CA
Posts: 5,876
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Generator experts - 220V from a 110 machine ?
I just resurrected my rarely used and therefore fully varnished Honda 2000I inverter generator. Mother of all carb cleanups. Even managed to fix the surge/drop in eco throttle mode (another clogged jet for idle I did not know existed). I was wondering if I could use it reliably for 220V operation in another country - I'm about to ship a palette of heavy stuff (furniture, books) via donkey+boat to a friend in Europe and I could add it as weight is not important (getting charged for a volume that fits on the palette). It serves me no purpose here (I have solar + battery and a propane gen and if it sits it goes bad over time, even with Stabil).
As the name implies it should supply 2000W of 110V here int he US - would it be as simple as buying a decent transformer rated for 2000W+ and convert 110-> 220V ? Those are $150 or so. Would the existence of that middle step affect the output of power in any significant way ? Or the duration of allowable usage ? (heat?) Sorry I can turn a screwdriver and clean carbs but electricity is magic to me! Thx ! |
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: La Crosse, WI
Posts: 1,354
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The catch is going to be that most of Europe is 50hz, where your generator is 60hz, and there's no good way of changing the frequency. Sell the generator and send them the cash.
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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Posts: 37,820
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I think the issue is more the Hz. Ours is 60 and Europe is 230v single phase 50 Hz. The step up is possible but you are going to need more electronics to convert the phase. Many powered items don't care. Clocks do. Who has an electric clock?
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Registered
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: CA
Posts: 5,876
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Ahh, HZ, there you go, thanks guys !!!
> "many powered items don't care" Will investigate that statement a little, but sounds like I might as well sell - during the next outage LOL -- thanks ! |
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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
Posts: 37,820
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Well, I was speaking about Hz. Voltage is another matter. But most 120v power tools in the US will run on 50 Hz. Just slower.
Anyway, the generator is not very helpful in the rest of the world. |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 8,726
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Not to mention that the outlets will all be shaped wrong, and changing to euro-specific coded outlets on a generator body might not be trivial. Finally, it might not be CE rated, and your friend would be in a world of hurt if something went wrong and something/someone got hurt from a non CE machine.
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Mike Bradshaw 1980 911SC sunroof coupe, silver/black Putting the sick back into sycophant! |
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Registered
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: CA
Posts: 5,876
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>Not to mention that the outlets will all be shaped wrong
Not coming from the transformer.... I never considered retrofitting on the generator.. >Anyway, the generator is not very helpful in the rest of the world. Not sure if that's what you mean but all in all I'm told nobody uses a generator in Europe because outages are super rare. I guess the PG&E part of California is 1/3 world now.. I read up on 50/60hz, I get it, probably ok but overall not worth the trouble, will sell it here if ever, nice to have. PS; incidentally I listened to the dollop podcast on PG&E, it's amazing they are allowed to do any business anywhere in the universe ;-) Super interesting if you have a long drive ! |
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Retired in Georgia
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Quote:
Not worth it, as not only are the plugs/receptacles/cords different, and the 60/50Hz issue, but the non-mechanical bits on a USA vs. EU specs Honda generators are night and day. So for best results, just rent an Euro-spec generator when you get there. Sure, it will add $$ but significantly reduce hassle and probably safer too. Oh, and all EUxxxxi Honda modles use an inverter, and are a lot more sophisticated than a standard/traditional genset. The inverter is the single most spendy part, so if the smoke escapes from one, well, that's what we call round these parts a boar-hoggin'
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I've got five kids, an Italian wife, and I (used to) write about lawn mowers. You think you have problems? -Robert Coats |
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Registered
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: CA
Posts: 5,876
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Didn't think about parts - thanks Robert - idea dropped.
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Registered
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Maryland
Posts: 31,557
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Once again, ask a question here and a couple of Yahoos chime in.
😎 |
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