24 Hour run on Natural Gas Generator - Change oil or no?

Sleep well . You're fine .

I sleep very well (The stack is 2 rows deep) 😆

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I would leave it in. It is just like driving your car to 80% oil life, and thinking you need to change the oil. I would argue that the engine gets more oil wear on its regular maintenance startups than it did in the time you ran it 24 hours.

Was it the first time it ran under load? If so, maybe change the filter and top off, if you feel like it.

All in I think that changing the oil would be premature. All thing being equal.

On the other hand, what can it hurt?

You are fortunate to have a generator.
 
The scrench on my Husqvarna k970 saw it torx instead of flat. "quikie saw" The filter housing is torx.
 
I forgot all about this thread

Looking back, I wish I had changed it. Power went out at 2:34am on Monday July 8th for Hurricane Beryl, and never came back up until Sunday the 14th of July at 9:12AM, so 6 days and 6 hours on generator

I did shut down the day before the power came back on and change the oil despite being well over the 125 hour OCI, I was actually at 162 hours. Having an extra 24 hour buffer would have been nice! I would not have shut down and changed had I known the power was going to come back the next day, but the utility website updated and indicated I may have to wait another week for power...

Of course now I'm back to square one with 24 hours on the oil since it ran for another day.

I sent the sample in to Blackstone, will of course post the results. Any bets on if they think I can go longer, or if they will say its borderline?
I ran mine for 10 days on Mobil 1 0w40 then another 8 days on fresh oil, no problem, the oil was still clean. I wouldn't sweat it for a minute.
 
It's a 4 pole generator, so it chugs along.
Has an oil filter.
Burns natural gas.
Leter run for 100 to 200hrs.
Or even better, do an oil at 100hrs.
 
Put the gas outside in a shed. Your insurance company will not cover you in a fire with that much gas inside.

Already went down this rabbit hole. In my city, without a permit, I cannot store this amount of gas unless its attached to a generator or vehicle.

Insurance won't cover it only if the gas is the cause of the fire. Since I'm not a complete idiot, and they are fantastic gas cans, that's pretty much not going to happen
 
What generator?
That was during a big ice storm that knocked power out for 18 days and 21 for some other people. This was a Generac 7500 gasoline I bought at the HD at 5am on the second day with no power, they brought in a truck load and had people line up outside to buy one, you took what they had no choices.
After filling 5 gallon jug from a crowded gas station 15 miles away for all that time I went to a permanent NG. I will give the Generac credit, it kept my oil heat furnace, fridge and lights, tv and dvr all running without any problems.

Even today our power grid is sketchy, it is common to wake up and find we are on generator power sometime more than once or twice a week. This was the devestating storm.

https://www.weather.gov/media/box/science/December_2008_Ice_Storm.pdf
 
How long will that gas keep?

Because these cans are completely sealed, quite a lot time. I fill them to the brim with regular 87 pump gas, whatever ethanol content is sold at the pump now, no fuel stabalizers

I've tested a can at the 2 years mark and it was fine. Usually they get rotated out around 6-7 months in though, I just fill up my truck from them and then re-fill
 
Change it if over 62 hours. Whenever that occurs but no more than two years. 62+ hours at the end of one year change it.
 
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