50kw is a little overkill for a house unless you are running the whole neighborhood isn't it? Not too mentioned a whale of a lot more money than what Skeet's can buy the 10kw Winco for.
Not overkill at all, if I operate all of my electric heat, stove and dryer at the same time as well as other energy consuming devices, I max at 31-33kw. By having a large enough generator to run everything at once, well I can just live my life like I had power grid power, no worries about what to use or no.
FYI - my house has a 320 amp service (two 200 amp boxes, which are really 160 amp boxes) so I probably use a bit more than some, although my garage is powered off the house, I do not figure the 50 amp service for the welder in the total consumption because I rarely use that, and would not be in a storm.
And the left over? Well the pump house takes about 12k to operate both pumps, as well as being capacitor start on the main pressure pump which requires quite a bit more at initial start up. I do have to run a 6 gauge power cable over there, I have it on a reel that I can use my tractor to deploy and wind it back up, although it is a manual wind, I am waiting to come up with a spare hydraulic motor to power the reel.
Yes, a whole lot more that Skeets is paying, but the main point is that no matter what you do, a PTO generator is lacking when powering variable load homes. Yes, it will power, but a smaller gas or diesel generator is a much better choice in the long run, even if it needs annual maint.
Skeets has to come to his own decision on this, I just pointed out some good as well as some pitfalls to PTO generators, just like you did with not having to have another piece of equipment to maintain.
Good clean power at the right hertz as well as the proper sine wave goes a long ways to make things work and last.
Just ask those who have suffered a brown out on power line power, lots of equipment gets damaged. I am also protected against that, although a EMP will still take me out!
David