bczygan
Well-known member
Recent threads about home generators and my experience with an outage in the last 24 hours bring me to begin this thread.
I'm talking about a portable gasoline powered generator being hooked up to feed essential services for an emergency.
I am taking a couple of things as givens.
A small portable generator isn't going to run for extended periods. It's more of an extender for freezer and fridge contents, and a provider of energy for a few electrical essentials, like minimum lights, TV and computer power, clock radio and charging for cell phones.
Maybe with a larger unit, and judicial switching of loads, a small microwave. But all cooking, household heating, water heating and clothes drying would be gas. For cooling, a box fan would substitute for AC.
So I'm thinking maybe 5500 watts capacity, plus or minus. Something that could be wheeled around, lifted and used for camping as well.
The question is how to integrate it with the household for emergencies.
If you are at home when the outage occurs, you can certainly turn on everything manually. You could even run some temporary extension cords all over the house and plug in some temporary lights.
I'm thinking of something a little more user friendly.
Don't know if this would be electric start, so the question of manual or electric transfer switch comes up.
And how do you configure a system?
Cost is an object. Most of our outages are a day or less. Just went through one. A freezer will last a few hours, and an extension cord with a portable generator will take us through most of the night.
A couple days or more are much more problematic. We've lost freezers and fridges of food a few times.
I also see that there needs to be a correct sizing of the generator to match what will be powered. You don't want to run a 5500watt generator to power a single light bulb.
So what's the setup I'm looking for?
Bill
I'm talking about a portable gasoline powered generator being hooked up to feed essential services for an emergency.
I am taking a couple of things as givens.
A small portable generator isn't going to run for extended periods. It's more of an extender for freezer and fridge contents, and a provider of energy for a few electrical essentials, like minimum lights, TV and computer power, clock radio and charging for cell phones.
Maybe with a larger unit, and judicial switching of loads, a small microwave. But all cooking, household heating, water heating and clothes drying would be gas. For cooling, a box fan would substitute for AC.
So I'm thinking maybe 5500 watts capacity, plus or minus. Something that could be wheeled around, lifted and used for camping as well.
The question is how to integrate it with the household for emergencies.
If you are at home when the outage occurs, you can certainly turn on everything manually. You could even run some temporary extension cords all over the house and plug in some temporary lights.
I'm thinking of something a little more user friendly.
Don't know if this would be electric start, so the question of manual or electric transfer switch comes up.
And how do you configure a system?
Cost is an object. Most of our outages are a day or less. Just went through one. A freezer will last a few hours, and an extension cord with a portable generator will take us through most of the night.
A couple days or more are much more problematic. We've lost freezers and fridges of food a few times.
I also see that there needs to be a correct sizing of the generator to match what will be powered. You don't want to run a 5500watt generator to power a single light bulb.
So what's the setup I'm looking for?
Bill
