Billdog350
Member
Equipment
Kubota L3710 HST,L2230A QT,forks,Takeuchi TB125, 60" Luck Now pto Snowblower
85Hokie, they have the inverter generators now at Harbor freight and Honda/Yamaha have some too. Those are the cats ass.....they are a DC generator that converts to a square sine wave AC...so they are CLEAN power for all electronics...and can idle down with a low load (lower DC voltage and amperage but the AC stays at 120v)....and then throttle up to meet demand. A perfect situation for varying loads. The gas consumption will match the usage for those...which is perfect. Most are 2000-3000watts...but use closer to my 700 watt unit when they're not fully loaded.
http://www.harborfreight.com/http-w...c-portable-inverter-generator-61169-html.html
For now, my $89 Harbor Freight special is my go-to unit for long outages, and I use my 10kw Hobart to run the furnace, well, etc for showers and stuff. By having two generators, I have paid for the little guy in the first outage alone...I would have gone through 24-30gal per day vs 2-3......at $3.70/gal here in CT...that's over $80/day savings!
I heard about this trick from a friend years ago, and have told everyone about it since. Its worth it to buy the generator and throw it on a shelf in your garage or basement and just wait till you lose power. For $90.....it will save a fridge worth of food and pay for itself the first time you use it. Not to mention keeping laptops and cellphones charged is becoming an "essential" thing for most people.
http://www.harborfreight.com/http-w...c-portable-inverter-generator-61169-html.html
For now, my $89 Harbor Freight special is my go-to unit for long outages, and I use my 10kw Hobart to run the furnace, well, etc for showers and stuff. By having two generators, I have paid for the little guy in the first outage alone...I would have gone through 24-30gal per day vs 2-3......at $3.70/gal here in CT...that's over $80/day savings!
I heard about this trick from a friend years ago, and have told everyone about it since. Its worth it to buy the generator and throw it on a shelf in your garage or basement and just wait till you lose power. For $90.....it will save a fridge worth of food and pay for itself the first time you use it. Not to mention keeping laptops and cellphones charged is becoming an "essential" thing for most people.
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