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every hard rain they go down good idea but hard to do right in low areas with a high water table esp if done on the cheap by land developers last bad hurricane the power was off then on then off for days as they fixed the system we had extension cords running across the street to send power from the working side or the guys with bigger generators sharing several homes with power |
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I keep thinking about replacing my Generac (10kW/12.5kW peak) with a 20kKW diesel because of the noise (could be worse, but I find it really irritating). But I'm in the same boat as others weighing getting a generator against the amount of use it would get. The amount of time we have to run it isn't all that much. If I went that route, I'd also upgrade the transfer switch to power more circuits and add in the well pump - so $$$$$.
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We actually went without power for three days last year. They were replacing a bunch of wood poles in the area with huge steel ones. It's being done to mitigate problems in case of fire & high winds. Some of the distribution poles are huge, and the others in between are much taller than the old wood poles. I'm going to wait to see if they reduce or eliminate outages - although like I said, outages haven't been a big problem. If it works out, I won't need to think about a generator.
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Three days without power here and my Honeywell 5500 ran like a champ. I found it new on Craigslist for $300. Well worth it at twice the price. Next project will be a transfer box setup so I don’t have to run cords everywhere.
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We had a small generator which allowed us to plug in fridge and freezer and maybe something else, but it was manual start. It was almost more than the wife could do to start it if I wasn't home.
Now there is an electric start unit in a repurposed shed (with forced air ventilation ) feeding a switchable panel in the house via an underground cable. Problem solved. Best Les |
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Zeta just blew through the ATL and here in Mariettta, GA we are going on 30 hours now sans power. After loading up 3 five gallon fuel cans, I found an open station and filled them all, then yanked my 3000 watt portable generator out and under our deck, strung all the extension cords I could find, and soon had the fridge, TV, laptops/chargers, etc. up and running. Our cable-based broadband came online overnight, so I can share this message with you.
Having recently retired from the generator part of American Honda, I can tell you from my many customer interactions that a basic 2000-3000 watt portable will do a great job for most homes. It will easily run the basics, as long as you thing of it as 'indoor camping' and understand not every single device is going to get power. Learn to 'load share', i.e., if you need to do laundry, unplug the fridge and plug in the washer. If you have gas heat, it's not too hard to wire up a special plug to run the 120v blower motor. On the other end of the thermometer, consider buying a small window AC unit for use in the bedroom; it will keep you cool enough to sleep at night, and many will easily run on a small generator. Best of all, a 2k-3k inverter-style generator (Honda and Yamaha make really high quality products), extension cords, fuel cans, etc. will run you $2,100~$3,500, far less than the five-figures it would cost for for a whole-house unit. Oh yeah, the cheaper portables are, well, portable. Nice if your house is doing okay, but a neighbor or nearby family member is dead in the water. New model Hondas even have an smartphone/Bluetooth App that can report output levels, fuel remaining, etc. Don't be an idiot and use the stupid f*cking suicide cord. If you are a single hermit, with no family, okay, fine. But if you have a wife, kids, etc. that have 'watched daddy hook up the generator' and now try and do it without you, you are asking for tragedy. I'll guess most of the people reading this understand the danger of Carbon Monoxide poisoning from engine exhaust, and will be sure to only place a running generator in an outdoor location. |
I just ordered a dual fuel (gas/propane) 8kw, electric start Champion gererator before I read about their notorious problem with XS oil consumption because Sandwicher can’t pull the cord anymore-which is a bad sign all the way around.
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We lost our power yesterday at 6:00 in the morning and it's still out ☹️ . Two power poles snapped in half about 3/4 miles from my house. I expect to be without power for the weekend but maybe will get lucky 😁 .
My Honda E3000 generator is humming along powering a fridge , freezer , various lamps and cellphone chargers . Buying more gas today for the next two days . Fun times |
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five figures? You must have a BIG house. I paid $9000 all-in for a 20kw Generac and transfer switch with a load shedding switch for the AC. That was 3000 square foot house. |
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costco has some decent sized 5K-9K dual fuel generators at fair prices too.
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Timely thread for me. We are building a new home and want to plan for wiring (cut-over switch) now and perhaps add a generator later. It'll be connected to natural gas.
Appreciate input for our planning. Now is the time since we are in the design stages. |
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