That is great that you found a good one, taking a bit of a gamble and winning on something like that can save you a lot of money. I have heard that some people are having great luck with the super cheap (~$85 on sale) small Harbor Freight generators as well, but others have duds right out of the box, so it is hard to know if you can trust one if you buy it. If you found one that worked well that would be a very cheap way to charge small battery banks.
I have tried finding something other than Honda, Yamaha, etc. that has been made for a while with good reviews and product support in terms of future parts etc. I keep coming up short when it comes to the cheaper offshore stuff. I am sure they are like anything else, there are going to be a couple real gems that are great value for the money, but it is hard to know in advance which ones those might be.
For future reference, what brand and model is the one you have, and is it an inverter (pure sine) generator like the Honda I referenced or the more common and much cheaper modified sine wave type?
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I've got a Champion generator that uses the honda-clone 6.5 hp engine. It's basically a generic Chinese machine, but it comes with a warranty and parts support.
Canadian tire often has them on sale here in the $3-400 range
Chanpion's website has parts and tech support, so it's not really like buying an orphan.
It's not sold as an inverter model, But I've never had any issues in many hours running things like TV's satellite recievers, a freezer, and electronic-ballast fluorescent lights.
I have some experience with those $99 2-stroke generators too. They can generally put out much more than their rated capacity, but they tend to have issues like vapour'locking and parts rattling loose and falling off. Replace and reroute the fuel line and go over it with some locktite and it'll work very well for what it is.
I have a Champion generator and love it. Price was great and customer support even better. It is not pure sine and I cannot run my 60" TV off of it or basically any important electronics without it making them hum due to the modified sine wave output.
The customer service was amazing. I had the rule cutoff switch break on me the day before Thanksgiving 2012 and somewhere around where the warranty ran out. I called customer service, the guy I talked to said it was not an issue and expressed me a new part which got to me in 2 days.
The switch breaking I believe was my fault due to leaving gas in it and letting it corrode and varnish for too long. I swapped out the switch and have not had issues again. It starts on the first or second pull no matter how cold it is, I've tested it at 20 to 30 below zero. It runs 12 hours on 4 gallons running 2 1200 watt heaters. It is rated at 3500 running watts and 4000 starting watts. It saved me from freezing in our blizzard of 2013. I stand by them.
I would like to get a pure sine wave inverter to run my sensitive electronics off of, but to be honest in a emergency outage I don't need them anyways and this generator will run all my essentials.
I have it in a outdoor deck box with insulation to help deaden the sound and keep it protected during storms. With the box and insulation the DB's go from 82 db's to 55 db's with the box closed at a distance of 2 feet. It has intake vents for air, a fan to expel heat, and an exhaust pipe ran external. Also under it I have rubber paving tiles to deaden the vibrations onto my deck. There are holes in the side that I run extension cords though and the grounding cable. I also have a remote temp gauge so I can monitor the temp inside the box from in the house so I don't get an overheated generator.
For long term alternate power the generator I have is not what I want.. A wind turbine and solar is the way to go with a great battery bank and some good inverters.