rarebreed
Well-known member
Looking for advice on a good Whole Home Generator. Will likely be connecting it to the natural gas currently at the home.
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
Looking for advice on a good Whole Home Generator. Will likely be connecting it to the natural gas currently at the home.
Thoughts?
Looking for advice on a good Whole Home Generator. Will likely be connecting it to the natural gas currently at the home.
Thoughts?
I run my house on a 6kw generator when the power fails. It's enough to run everything but the HVAC. I don't use a transfer switch, rather I turn off the main breaker inside the house and backfeed power from my detached garage by connecting the generator to a 30 amp inlet. Generator is inside the detached garage so no chance of theft and minimal noise for myself and the neighbors.
portable generators are much cheaper than whole house units...I guess it depends on how often you lose power. For me it's not that often.
Looking for advice on a good Whole Home Generator. Will likely be connecting it to the natural gas currently at the home.
Thoughts?
I don't use a transfer switch, rather I turn off the main breaker inside the house and backfeed power from my detached garage by connecting the generator to a 30 amp inlet.
I should add: do not skimp on the transfer switch. Pay for a good one...ASCO, Eaton, ABB. Do not buy a Generac switch.
These small air-cooled units...all of them...run hot, and break down their oil rapidly. The single most important thing to buy is the service agreement, and be sure you're buying from someone who can support that agreement.
At the risk of sidetracking this discussion, absolutely don't do this.
Nothing wrong with this setup since the main breaker going out to the street is disconnected. Almost 20 years with this setup when the power occasionally goes out. I do understand that a transfer switch is the "proper" setup.
Actually there is a lot wrong with it.
And doing so is a good way to get your service drop cut by a lineman.
DONT DO THAT.
Main disconnect is locked out with key on the same key ring as the generator.
The backfeed circuit is balanced between both 120v sides of the panel for the circuits I use during an outage. Those circuits are colored coded to be on during an outage, all others are off.
The pigtail from the generator to the garage sub panel is a twist lock with female
ends so even if it comes out it doesn’t have energized pins.
All thats missing is a transfer switch which I already acknowledged.
I don't use a transfer switch, rather I turn off the main breaker inside the house and backfeed power from my detached garage by connecting the generator to a 30 amp inlet.
Main disconnect is locked out with key on the same key ring as the generator. The backfeed circuit is balanced between both 120v sides of the panel for the circuits I use during an outage. Those circuits are colored coded to be on during an outage, all others are off.
The pigtail from the generator to the garage sub panel is a twist lock with female ends so even if it comes out it doesn’t have energized pins. All thats missing is a transfer switch which I already acknowledged.
Post a picture of what you have
What Greenskeeper does is:
1. Illegal in most if not ALL jurisdictions.
2. Dangerous. If the main switch isn't disconnected when the generator is started or is turned on while the generator is running the electricity working on the downed power line could be KILLED.
3. Its stupid.
My whole estate or something specific?
1) Lots of things are Illegal...Do you follow all the rules?
2) It's practically impossible with my setup to start the generator without locking out my house from the power grid. The generator key is on the same key ring as the lockout for the main disconnect which is hung at the main panel in the house. I can't start the generator without that key. I also can't unlock the main disconnect if the key is in the generator.
3) thanks for your opinion
FWIW lineman have a truly thankless job
1) Lots of things are Illegal...Do you follow all the rules?
I run my house on a 6kw generator when the power fails. It's enough to run everything but the HVAC. I don't use a transfer switch, rather I turn off the main breaker inside the house and backfeed power from my detached garage by connecting the generator to a 30 amp inlet. Generator is inside the detached garage so no chance of theft and minimal noise for myself and the neighbors.
portable generators are much cheaper than whole house units...I guess it depends on how often you lose power. For me it's not that often.



Geez not this again. DO NOT FOLLOW THIS ADVICE![]()
Main disconnect is locked out with key on the same key ring as the generator.
The backfeed circuit is balanced between both 120v sides of the panel for the circuits I use during an outage. Those circuits are colored coded to be on during an outage, all others are off.
The pigtail from the generator to the garage sub panel is a twist lock with female
ends so even if it comes out it doesn’t have energized pins.
All thats missing is a transfer switch which I already acknowledged.
Main disconnect is locked out with key on the same key ring as the generator.
The backfeed circuit is balanced between both 120v sides of the panel for the circuits I use during an outage. Those circuits are colored coded to be on during an outage, all others are off.
The pigtail from the generator to the garage sub panel is a twist lock with female
ends so even if it comes out it doesn’t have energized pins.
All thats missing is a transfer switch which I already acknowledged.
It will work until someone gets hurt.