I bought this one...
http://www.electricgeneratorsdirect.com/Guardian-QuietSource-5638/p1832.html
...from my local Guardian dealer about two months ago. 22kW (40kW surge), liquid cooled, 1800 rpm, 2.4L Mitsubishi 4 cylinder, LPG fueled. I paid quite a bit less than the price shown on the website, but I'm sure my dealer made up for it on the installation cost.
My area was hit by Ike. Fortunately, I was on the "clean side" of the storm, but we lost power for four days. The town eight miles south of me had widespread power outages for over two weeks.
The generator powered a 17 year old four ton A/C (i.e., not very efficient), 1.5hp water well pump, two refrigerators, washer, gas dryer, and everything else with no problems at all. I have half a dozen UPS's running various computers, DVR's, etc., and I only heard them beep once or twice during the four days. I have a "whole house" automatic transfer switch, so everything had power. The only thing we didn't use was the electric oven. My dryer, cooktop, water heater, and furnace are LPG.
This model uses the same engine as their 27kW model and th OP's 35kW model, so I am confident the engine has plenty of power. There were several times when the well pump kicked on while the A/C was running and vice versa. The odds of both kicking on at the same time and overloading the surge capacity (even if it would) is so small it wasn't worth worrying about. Remember that the surge for either lasts well less than a second.
I run it off of a 500 gallon propane tank. The generator probably runs at 25% load except when the A/C is on. I figure I can go a week without refilling the tank.
IMHO, if this model proves to be reliable, Guardian/Generac has a real winner in its lineup. This thing should easily power everything in a home with up to 5 tons of A/C. Most of the competition is at least at 25kW, and many start at 30kW, and they are substantially more expensive. Plus, Guardian/Generac seems to have the best dealer network set up for residential installations.
The funny thing is many of my neighbors wanted to know more about it while the power was off, and said they wanted to talk to me about it once everything got back to normal. Four weeks later, no one has mentioned it. Guess they won't until the next time.