Quote:
Originally Posted by atom ant
Mark,
I had the same concern back when I put it in our 2007, but no vent is needed beyond the bottom. If you look in the manual, the generator has a large fan and shroud on the bottom that draws air up from the bottom and circulates it around the generator than pushes it back out the bottom. All you need is the bottom opening (which is already configured in the cabinet with the gen prep). Everything above the base is designed to stay enclosed for quietness.
Two mistakes I made that are good lessons learned:
My generator has some holes in the base for routing exhaust out the front, side, or back. Those need to be covered with aluminum tape (per Onan), or the fan will push heat into your cabinet and can melt the cabinet door like I did on my Montana. With those unused holes closed off, it will run nice and cool.
I was messing with mine and I left the cabinet door open and the front panel off and ran it for an hour in the heat - it actually shut down from overheat and I almost destroyed it. With the cover off and cabinet opened, it disrupts the cooling flow out the bottom and it will quickly overheat. Fortunately it survived as that was 11 years ago, and that same generator has been our friend for 12 years now.
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Brad:
Thanks for the heads up on keeping the cabinet door closed & gen. panel on when operating the gen. Never knew this, & there were several times when I used to run my Generac gen. on my previous Cardinal 5er without adhering to this. Guess that I was lucky that I didn't damage it.
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Mike & Gayle
Our 3 fur children "Ting-Tang"&"Saylor"(Shih Tsu's) &"Kai" (Finnish Spitz)
2007 Silverado Classic 3500 LT C.C. Longbed Dually,
Duramax, Allison Tranny, 62 Gal. Titan Tank
2016 39MB 5.5 Onan, Residential Package, Goodyear G114's, Mor/ryde heavy duty Shackle/bushing upgrade.
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