Generator troubleshooting help before you start replacing parts.
Generator troubleshooting help can save time when a portable generator will not start, stalls under load,
trips breakers, produces no power, or acts different than it did last season. Wire & Wrench Solutions
helps you think through symptoms, safe checks, maintenance history, and practical next steps over the phone.
Generator safety comes first
Portable generators create serious carbon monoxide, fire, fuel, and electrical hazards. The U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission warns that portable generators should never be used inside homes or garages and
should be operated outside, away from the home, with exhaust pointed away. If there is carbon monoxide risk,
fire, shock, or fuel danger, stop and get local help immediately.
Remote generator troubleshooting is best for planning, symptoms, maintenance questions, photos, model
numbers, and deciding what to check next. It is not a substitute for emergency service, licensed electrical
work, or unsafe live testing.
Common generator troubleshooting problems
Fuel, spark, oil level, choke position, stale gas, battery condition, and maintenance basics.
Fuel flow, air restriction, load problems, dirty carburetor symptoms, and shutdown switches.
Breaker status, outlets, load issues, reset buttons, connections, and safe next-step planning.
Overload symptoms, extension cord problems, connected equipment, and transfer switch questions.
Oil, plugs, filters, storage, fuel treatment, exercise schedules, and seasonal readiness.
Whether the next step makes sense based on age, symptoms, cost, and the type of generator.
How remote generator troubleshooting works
Before the call
- Send the brand and model number.
- Describe exactly what happens when you try to start it.
- Include fuel type, age of fuel, oil status, and recent storage history.
- Share photos of labels, outlets, switches, breakers, and any obvious damage.
During the call
- We sort symptoms into likely causes.
- We talk through safe checks only.
- We decide what not to touch if it looks unsafe.
- You leave with a clearer repair plan or a reason to call a local pro.
When a local professional is the better answer
Call a qualified local professional if the issue involves home backfeeding, transfer switch installation,
exposed wiring, repeated breaker trips, fuel leaks, carbon monoxide alarm activity, fire damage, storm damage,
or anything that requires permits or licensed electrical work.
Generator safety resources
For official generator safety information, review the
CPSC carbon monoxide safety information
and the
National Fire Protection Association ,
or checkout our troubleshooting guide
Generator won’t start?
