thought i would start this section out with what i have found to be a relatively inexpensive, accurate,
and effective means of measuring the factors needed to determine BSFC or how much fuel are we consuming
per kwatt hour of electricity produced.
in the beginning i worked with clamp on amp meters, and a volt meter, and used a resistive load in an effort to
keep power factor to as near unity as possible. it soon became apparent that this is problematic.
clamp on meters can be very accurate, and can also shift about, volt meters generally are very accurate, but
trying to read both amps and volts at the same time, then multiply the two, especially when a resistive heater load
shifts about as a draft comes across them, and also then having to time the test to get down to kw/hrs is just not
going to get one accurate and repeatable test results.
i started to look for a solution, when i came across the GE kv series digital residential watt/hour meter
http://cgi.ebay.com/FOUR-GE-FITZALL-DIGITAL-WATTHOUR-METERS-3-PHASE-/230422569995?cmd=ViewItem&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item35a641640bthis ebay unit is meant for 3phase, but is indicative of what a single phase unit also looks like.
what i found was on the front there is a optical port for programming the head, which we can talk about later
and also a small lever actuator on the lower right side, this switches the readout to read things like voltage per phase, amps per phase
and a few other things.
beside the lever is a small push button (momentary) that is inaccessible from the outside, but clearly visible under the lexan cover.
when we depress this button the head goes to diagnostic/test calibration mode. i just drilled a hole through the cover to access and depress
the momentary switch.
in this mode the unit will measure power in watt/hours, running an genset now until one reads out 1000watt/hrs will give you an accurate
measure of a kw/hr produced and consumed by the test load, no matter how that load might shift about over the length of the test.
now we don't need an amp meter, volt meter and a stop watch, we simply run until we get 1000, 2000, or whatever test we want.
this leaves us with only having to log and read out how many grams of fuel were consumed per 1000watt/hrs produced.
the resulting accuracy is very high, and incredibly repeatable.
one would need a meter box to mount the meter head of course, and there are suitable and very inexpensive options available at the box
stores to provide for either a dedicated box or a combination meter/breaker panel (which i use and it cost me 34 bucks)
the meter heads can be bought on ebay from time to time for less than 50 bucks, the meter box for 34 or less, and a digital gram scale can
also be had for 25 bucks or so, for a complete capability of getting very accurate testing for a bit over 100 bucks, and
the meterhead is useful for your finished unit, in that it will track accumulated kwatt/hrs as well or course which is nice to track service intervals.
in my next installment i will talk about how i measure and correlate recovered waste heats and factor them to the amount of fuel consumed
and against kw/hours of electricity produced.
bob g