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Larry Jaques Larry Jaques is offline
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Default Homemade utility wagons

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On Mon, 04 Aug 2008 23:38:58 -0500, with neither quill nor qualm,
Ignoramus22807 quickly quoth:

I have decided to upgrade my home generator and bought a 20 kW
Onan generator.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=160266535744

I have looked at it prior to bidding and found it to be in a tip top
shape.

As an aside, it has a very familiar to me Cummins L423 engine. To find
out more about that engine, type "L423D" in google.com and the first
approximately 10 entries are related to me and the specific ones that
I fixed up 2 years ago, with your assistance.

My L423D running, is shown he

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVxHrMRQyvw


Is that a yarmulke you're wearing there, Ig? bseg


Anyway. The thing comes with a separate dual walled 120 gallon fuel
tank. The whole package, as in the generator, the tank, and the
enclosure to be built, will weigh approximately 2200 lbs.


Very cool package. Congrats.


I have two obvious options for installing it:

1) Install it on a stationary pad.

2) Install it on some sort of a "wagon" so that later it is easier to
move it, sell it etc. This will also, in my mind, make it a "portable
generator on wheels" and will simplify a lot of legal bull****.


A 1+ ton wagon would have to be pretty heavy duty.


So. Has anyone built any such offroad wagons that could be pulled by a
bobcat, or a few men fueled by meat and beer.


Newp.


I have some experience building trailers, e.g. if you search
http://images.google.com/, and type "homemade trailer", the first
entry would be mine. The "wagon" is considerably easier to build,
I think, due to its offroad nature.


Aren't those rectangles in the base forklift holes? Maybe you could
build a wagon which straddles the Onan and has forks which pick it up.
A spider-like overhead pallet lift, if you will.
(NOT like this. http://www.spiderlifts.com/ )

Better yet, make a 4WD setup for your basic 2T shop crane. Bolt on
large pneumatic wheels and a steerable front, then use the standard
crane to lift the Onan, resting/bolting it on steel crossbeams once
it's up. (I should patent this 4WD shop crane idea.)

--
A great preservative against angry and mutinous thoughts, and all
impatience and quarreling, is to have some great business and
interest in your mind, which, like a sponge shall suck up your
attention and keep you from brooding over what displeases you.
-- Joseph Rickaby