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CCL Series (Residential/Light Commercial Gaseous)

Kohler CCL Series: 25–36 kW liquid-cooled gaseous standby for residential and small commercial applications.

2536 kW3 modelsnatural gaslpgdual fuel ng lpg

Series Overview#

The Kohler CCL Series is a three-model liquid-cooled gaseous generator line spanning 25 to 36 kW standby. All models use the Kohler KG2204T turbocharged 2.2L 4-cylinder engine, run on natural gas, LPG, or dual-fuel (NG/LPG), and output 120/240V single-phase. The series covers the residential and small commercial standby market where liquid cooling is preferred over air-cooled alternatives for lower noise levels and more consistent thermal management.

The CCL designation positions these units at the intersection of residential and light commercial applications — the same power range as a large whole-house residential generator or a small commercial property backup. At 25–36 kW, the CCL competes with air-cooled residential standby generators in the same class while offering the operational advantages of liquid cooling: quieter enclosure acoustics, consistent output regardless of ambient temperature variation, and a longer engine service life expectation under sustained load.

All three models use the Brushless Wound-Field alternator with PowerBoost excitation, providing sustained short-circuit capability up to 300% of rated current for 10 seconds. This is important for motor-starting applications — HVAC compressors, well pumps, and refrigeration compressors — where inrush current can be two to five times the running load. The CCL's excitation architecture handles these transient demands without voltage collapse.

The 25CCL, 30CCL, and 36CCL share an identical enclosure and dimensional footprint. This simplifies installation planning: the same pad, transfer switch wiring, and natural gas or LP supply infrastructure can accommodate any of the three models, making an upgrade straightforward if load requirements increase after initial installation.

How to Choose#

25 kW: 25CCL. The entry point of the CCL Series. Appropriate for residential applications where calculated whole-house standby demand is in the 18–22 kW range, or small commercial properties with similar load profiles. The 25CCL is the cost-optimized choice when the 30 kW headroom is not needed.

30 kW: 30CCL. The mid-range option for homes or small businesses with loads in the 22–27 kW range. This is often the right specification for a medium-sized single-family home with central HVAC, a home office, and standard appliances. It shares an enclosure with the 25CCL and 36CCL, so the physical installation is identical across all three.

36 kW: 36CCL. The top of the CCL Series. At 36 kW standby, this unit handles larger whole-house loads — dual-zone HVAC, pool pump, home office, and high-draw kitchen appliances simultaneously. It uses the same KG2204T engine as the 25CCL and 30CCL; the higher output is achieved through alternator sizing. Note that rated output varies from 30 to 36 kW depending on fuel type and voltage configuration — confirm with your dealer for the specific output on your intended fuel.

CCL vs RCL at similar power levels. At 30 kW, the 30CCL and 30RCL use the same KG2204T engine and output 120/240V single-phase. The product line distinction is primarily commercial — review spec sheets for the specific variants to identify any differences in enclosure design, warranty terms, or available options that matter for your installation.

Common Applications#

Service & Maintenance#

The CCL Series uses a 200-hour or 12-month oil change interval — more frequent than the RCL Series' 24-month schedule. For a generator that exercises weekly and runs occasional outages, the 12-month calendar trigger will typically be the binding constraint. Coolant replacement is scheduled at 2,000 hours; at the low runtime of a typical standby generator, this works out to roughly every 10–20 years of normal use, though physical aging of coolant over calendar years should also be considered.

Spark plug replacement every 500 hours is the most operationally critical maintenance item — this is universal across all three CCL models. Spark plug deterioration is the primary cause of misfire codes, rough running, and cylinder dropout faults in this series. Defer spark plug service and you risk a misfire event during the next actual outage.

The fuel pressure regulator is the next priority failure mode — hard starting, unstable idle, and gas pressure fault codes typically appear around 6,000 hours. Starting battery condition is the leading cause of failed exercise tests: proactive replacement every two to three years is recommended. Battery failures are the dominant no-start mode across all three models, regardless of apparent battery state under float charge.

All CCL Series (Residential/Light Commercial Gaseous) Models

ModelStandby kWPrime kWVoltageEngineEmissionsFuel
Kohler 25CCL25120/240VKohler KG2204Tnatural gas, lpg, dual fuel ng lpg
Kohler 30CCL30120/240VKohler KG2204Tnatural gas, lpg, dual fuel ng lpg
Kohler 36CCL36120/240VKohler KG2204Tnatural gas, lpg, dual fuel ng lpg

Frequently Asked Questions

What engine does the CCL Series use?
All three CCL models use the Kohler KG2204T — a turbocharged 2.2L 4-cylinder gaseous engine also found in the RCL Series (30RCL and 38RCL). This is a Kohler-manufactured industrial engine running at 1800 RPM.
How does the CCL Series differ from the RCL Series?
Both series use Kohler liquid-cooled engines and output 120/240V single-phase. The CCL Series (25–36 kW) overlaps somewhat with the lower end of the RCL Series (24–38 kW). The primary distinctions are marketing classification — CCL is positioned as residential/light commercial, while RCL is positioned as residential — and minor differences in enclosure and product variant designations. For direct model comparison, review spec sheets for the specific models you are considering.
What fuel types are supported?
All three CCL models support natural gas, LPG (propane), and dual-fuel (NG/LPG). The unit can be field-configured to switch between natural gas and LP, which is useful as a backup fuel arrangement.
What is the service interval?
The CCL Series uses a 200-hour oil change interval or 12 months (whichever comes first), coolant at 2,000 hours, air filter at 500 hours, and spark plugs at 500 hours. This is a more frequent schedule than the RCL Series' 24-month oil interval, reflecting different product positioning.
Does the CCL Series support three-phase output?
No. All CCL Series models output 120/240V single-phase only. For three-phase requirements at similar power levels, the KG Series industrial gaseous line (KG40–KG60) is the appropriate alternative.

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