dcg9381
Well-known member
I've made two big mistakes with generators, so I thought I'd share.
We had an on-the-road failure of a generac that was in an RV and ended up buying a Briggs and Straton 5000 / 5500 watt unit while on a road trip. My mistake was that the 240V outlet in this generator had a 17A breaker on the 240 side. So it would only do 120V @ 20A or 240v @ 17A - really, only enough to barely power a single AC unit - and nothing else. It would frequently trip the breaker on the road and didn't begin to replace the on-board generator (5000 watts) that had malfunctioned, but would fire 2 AC units.
I eventually got wiser about 120V power - and bought a Champion 4000/4500, which didn't have 240V, but did have a 120V @ 30A connector - and it was great for the RV. Not quite as loud as the 5000/5500 - but this was my "go-to" for years with the RV and cheap at about $300.
After a carb rebuild (even with non-ethanol fuel, 100LL fuel) - I decided to switch to a dual-fuel champion. And I wanted 240V - for a welding rig that is semi-portable.
So I bought 2 of these:
https://www.championpowerequipment.com/product/100574-4000-watt-dual-fuel-open-frame-inverter/
They worked great on propane (never have filled the gas tank). They have the 30A RV connection that I'm after.. And they can "throttle down" at low load...
So I "sync'd" these today - added the kit to do that. Plugged in welder. Nothing.. .Then I notice "not for 240V use". Ugh!
Basically these are 120V only - and operate in-sync only, so no 240V. They can put down 50A, which is great for RVs (with multiple ACs) - but a total fail at firing a welder...
YMMV.
We had an on-the-road failure of a generac that was in an RV and ended up buying a Briggs and Straton 5000 / 5500 watt unit while on a road trip. My mistake was that the 240V outlet in this generator had a 17A breaker on the 240 side. So it would only do 120V @ 20A or 240v @ 17A - really, only enough to barely power a single AC unit - and nothing else. It would frequently trip the breaker on the road and didn't begin to replace the on-board generator (5000 watts) that had malfunctioned, but would fire 2 AC units.
I eventually got wiser about 120V power - and bought a Champion 4000/4500, which didn't have 240V, but did have a 120V @ 30A connector - and it was great for the RV. Not quite as loud as the 5000/5500 - but this was my "go-to" for years with the RV and cheap at about $300.
After a carb rebuild (even with non-ethanol fuel, 100LL fuel) - I decided to switch to a dual-fuel champion. And I wanted 240V - for a welding rig that is semi-portable.
So I bought 2 of these:
https://www.championpowerequipment.com/product/100574-4000-watt-dual-fuel-open-frame-inverter/
They worked great on propane (never have filled the gas tank). They have the 30A RV connection that I'm after.. And they can "throttle down" at low load...
So I "sync'd" these today - added the kit to do that. Plugged in welder. Nothing.. .Then I notice "not for 240V use". Ugh!
Basically these are 120V only - and operate in-sync only, so no 240V. They can put down 50A, which is great for RVs (with multiple ACs) - but a total fail at firing a welder...
YMMV.
