acmikee
Well-known member
can you run a ductless split on a generator I've heard both a yes and no. i have a small 7K generator that i use when the power goes out im thinkg about installing a 2 head unit
I put a scope on mine:You might consider an inverter style generator if clean power is a concern.
However, I'm curious if anyone has a way to actually check a generator's power quality other than "plug it into a bunch of stuff and see what goes up in smoke". Not an efficient method of checking, but neither is buying a brand new generator if it's not really needed.
I'm using an inexpensive Wen (Yamaha clone) inverter style at home. No issues.

Last I checked, not too many inverter gens available in 240v flavor. IF your ductless are 120V, lots of inverter gens under 5kw.You might consider an inverter style generator if clean power is a concern.
However, I'm curious if anyone has a way to actually check a generator's power quality other than "plug it into a bunch of stuff and see what goes up in smoke". Not an efficient method of checking, but neither is buying a brand new generator if it's not really needed.
I'm using an inexpensive Wen (Yamaha clone) inverter style at home. No issues.
Last I checked, not too many inverter gens available in 240v flavor. IF your ductless are 120V, lots of inverter gens under 5kw.
Anyone with a scope can check the quality of power. I'm not sure you'll learn much though unless there is an obvious problem.
We use non-inverter gens all the time in residential. That's what consumer grade generac provides. I have not found something that they wouldn't run in my home... But I also assume larger gens are "more stable" and less sensitive to loads that are within spec.
It’s not the voltage that is the concern, it is keeping the frequency in spec.
As you add and drop loads, the demand on the generator and engine powering it dynamically changes. Inverter gena handle this due to design and how the inverter continuously adjusts to keep the frequency and voltage stable. Non inverter gen sets use a voltage regulator and governor. For small engines when the load changes it may take a bit to “catch up” which means the frequency may droop or spike. Large gens have more rotational mass to ride through the changes better.
********. Check your math. Jus sayin.A 10hz range is pretty broad. Even my Harbor freight 3500w can stay within 58-60hz under high loads. When i first got it I tested it by running a 4 ton and 2.5 ton furnace, 5000btu window ac, 3 pc's, two monitors, and 50 inch tv at the same time.
Not that hard actually.********. Check your math. Jus sayin.
have you ever run two of these using the parallel kit? I know there were a few problems with the (non-Honda) parallel kit a few years back that have supposedly been rectified. I'm in a location that gets semi-frequent power losses (like 4 times a year) and one of those losses tends to last a few days. House is all electric, don't have natural gas, don't want to install anything propane (long story but I hate propane industry) so two of these could power my whole house and provide piece of mind regarding electronics/THD (i have two very expensive variable speed geothermal heating/cooling units these could power). we lost power just before last christmas for few days, house dropped to 40ish. would love to run one the heat pumps but scared to do that with dirtier power
have you ever run two of these using the parallel kit?
Guessing cost is the only reason I don't hear more about this since the setup is ~$9500 for gensets and parallel kit?
ditto********. Check your math. Jus sayin.
ditto
looks like it was blowers only running
no compressors
i had a neighbor with one of those. i couldn't hear his generator over mine when i was standing in his driveway, 200' from mine and about 30' from his... very impressiveCost is the biggest issue. During this last outage, most of my neighbors had no idea I had/have a generator due to the lack of sound, which is both good and bad. Once people know you have an EU7, people tend to get sticky fingers.
Still never need it though
The best OPE is the stuff that can sit unused.That's one way to deter power outages.
then why mention the tonnage"A 10hz range is pretty broad. Even my Harbor freight 3500w can stay within 58-60hz under high loads. When i first got it I tested it by running a 4 ton and 2.5 ton furnace, 5000btu window ac, 3 pc's, two monitors, and 50 inch tv at the same time."
Never said Central Air Conditioning.
Because tonnage is something most know about about their HVAC systems vs blower CFM or amperage draw. Also, they are long gone for me to check model numbers and get the exact specs.then why mention the tonnage
I recently bought the Westinghouse 15k/12k DF. It has a 713cc v-twin. It's a beast. THD is under <5. It runs the whole house. They run between $2300 to 3K. It even comes with a trickle charger. I have a Honda 3000is but need 240V. Just couldn't justify the cost of the Hondas.two Eu7000is seem like holy grail from temporary power standpoint requiring 240V, low THD, and gas sipping ability. understanding you work for Honda, is there some downside I am missing with this setup? Guessing cost is the only reason I don't hear more about this since the setup is ~$9500 for gensets and parallel kit?
It’s not the voltage that is the concern, it is keeping the frequency in spec.
As you add and drop loads, the demand on the generator and engine powering it dynamically changes. Inverter gena handle this due to design and how the inverter continuously adjusts to keep the frequency and voltage stable. Non inverter gen sets use a voltage regulator and governor. For small engines when the load changes it may take a bit to “catch up” which means the frequency may droop or spike. Large gens have more rotational mass to ride through the changes better.