During hurricane Sandy I did not have a generator and was powerless for 6 days. Vowed to finally get a generator. My area was still out of power during Halloween. Bringing the kids around trick-or-treating, we passed many generators. 10 of them were the Home Depot standard ones. Always running at 3600 rpm and loud like you wouldn't believe. One we passed was a Honda 4000 inverter. Purred like a kitten. After agonizing for months, I went with a pair of Yamaha EF2000is sets.
My requirements/reasons:
- Low gas usage. lots of folks love the big 8-10-12kw generators, but during extended outages like Sandy, trying to get gas was a hardship. Seriously. I saw the people with the 5-gallon containers all over the place. Plan ahead, sure, but who would have expected 6-30 days without power? I even considered a diesel unit to hook up to my oil tank and have unlimited run time but I only found an expensive Chinese unit that I wasn't comfortable with. The Yamaha units run 11 hours at 1/4 load on a 1.1 gallon tank of fuel. x2 when both hooked up together to get the 4k output.
- Lightweight. I too bring one to the racetrack. These things carry like a suitcase. Easy to throw on the truck, etc. I actually pull the generator out to the backyard if I need power further than, say, a 100ft extension cord can reach. Just easier this way.
- Quietness. As inaudible as can be. At the track, we sleep in the trailer with the genny running outside. Not obtrusive at all, and it doesnt bother the other campers. And during Sandy, you can hear regular generators a mile away, all running at full speed. Annoying to have outside your window I bet.
- Quality. Certainly the Honda/Yamaha sets are an order of magnitude better than the standard sets. I went with Yamaha because of minor differences like gas gauge, easy to drain carb, slightly longer run time. And blue is cooler than red. Otherwise they are compatible.
- Extra benefit of having the ultimate in reliability. If one dies for whatever reason, say a bad spark plug or something not obtainable during an outage, another one is there. Obviously watts go down by half, but 2000 can run quite a bit just by itself. Like the fridge, and tv, and phone chargers. Or I can bring one to my mother's house if needed.
Downsides:
- Cost. 1900 for the pair is alot, no doubt, but how often on this forum is it
stated "The sting of low quality always last longer than the thrill of a cheap deal" or something like that. I applied that.
- Capacity. No 240v here. This is a deal-breaker for many. Not me so much. The object for me is not to replace utility power, but to make power outages, even long ones, livable.
That's my reasons. Happy so far.
-randy