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Worried about losing power in hurricane season....worry no more!
Generac generators installed by Southern Remodeling solves your problem. Complete and total operation from obtaining permit/license to generator installation to replacing landscaping. They do many jobs for special needs veterans with total customer satisfaction. Fair and reasonable pricing, expert workmanship, free estimates, great customer service. Keep the electricity flowing and avoid the power outage.
Call Bill Kerrigan 954 675 0702 |
not sure we are allowed to have these,
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Seems like an unnecessary purchase
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and whats it power with? lp ? oil ? how long can it run......1000 gal, lp or oil tank??
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Generac generators are wonderful but like all generators relatively noisy. And standby generators need to run weekly for a short period of time. With houses so close to each other that could be a problem. Perhaps a small portable inverter like those used for RVs?
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Should have cruised through the Historic Division after Irma. I'm not going to change your mind or even try but I guess depending on where you live would sway your decision on the Generator thing.
I have one that will give us A/C, Refrigeration, and TV and Internet. That's if the Manufactured House doesn't blow away, God forbid. Many people went an entire week with no electric. SAD, bad Duke. They have promised that things have been improved. We'll see. |
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When we do move it will be a house and it will be in the Historic Section only. :boxing2: |
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Well my rich friend has one . Testes every weekend . Last year we had a transformer blow and yes his started right up . Then it blew it's circuitry in 30 minutes . Lots of cursING the next 24 hours till fixed.
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unnecessary purchase
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Lost Power
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Propane in the ground?...........lightening strikes are common. Just wondering
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I have had a 14kw on my NJ house since 2012 and I guess I have to agree. You can hardly hear it. That's because you can hardly hear anything at all due to the deafening sound of it! That said, the house is sold this week, no more 747 next to the house when the power fails due to a gentle breeze blowing a leaf onto a power line 30 miles away! At our TV house, I'm going to get one of those EU2000 or similar invertor gensets. Enough to run the fridge and power some lights. |
want quiet
The 1800 rpm ones are 1/4 the volume of the cheaper 3600 rpm ones. If you want it to be reliable and run when you really need it -- don't get a generac. Gen- are known to fail when you need them most.
If you have the dough, get a solar with batteries. Very costly but makes zero noise. Lithium batteries last over ten years. They come from ChiCom manufacturers cause to make them is so toxic. US EPA won't allow manuf here in the USA. No simple answers on a small parcel. |
Our whole-house Generac is running as we speak. We are up north and lost power at 5:30 last night. It's still out this morning. Our generator is very loud, just outside our bedroom window, but that background noise made for a good nights sleep. Thankfully we're very rural with no close neighbors to annoy.
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We get power outages fairly frequently, and once every two years, we get a multi-day one. Not a single one of these Generacs has failed when we needed it most. In fact, mine ran for days after Sandy. I changed the oil two days in. I have literally had zero issues with it. I also work with an Electrician who is a Kohler dealer but services all types of Standby gensets. He tells me he gets more calls on Generacs. I then asked him what's the proportion of calls on Kohler vs Generac? About the same because there are about 10x more Generacs than anything else. |
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Note that a whole house generator needs to be located at least 5 feet away from windows or doors. So, if the generator is 4 feet long, you need about 14 feet of exterior wall space that doesn't have a window or door. Those restrictions can make it impossible to install a generator on many Villages properties, especially villas.
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We had a 14W Kohler with auto start when power failed in Oregon. Extremely quiet. Next door neighbors couldn’t hear it running and houses were close. Our power was out 10 days for a forest fire on the mountain. Never failed. If I thought we needed one in TV I wouldn’t hesitate. However. I don’t hear the power fails much here. Maybe a portable to run the tv and refrigerator would be more practical here.
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I have a total house Generac runs on natural gas, exercises once a week, I never hear it, but does give you piece of mind during hurricane season!
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I have a Honda EU 2800, very quiet. But, I also put in a direct link to my main box so that I do not need any extension cords. It has a protection lock out to prevent power feeding back to the lines. Just go to my main box and turn off or on anything except water heater and air conditioning. Runs on gas so I keep my cart full and one 5 gallon can. Used it once so far for a temporary outage. During Irma, our kind neighbor let us keep our fridge running. That convinced me to get one. Old Boy Scout - Be Prepared!
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I purchased a 22W whole house Generac propane generator with auto transfer after Irma blew thru up here and left me without power for 10 days.
It has a 1000 lb tank and my propane supplier can remotely check and monitor the propane levels. The tank sits above ground and generator is mounted on a slab. It runs once a week for 5 minutes. I haven't found it to be noisy. I barely hear it and it's about 20 ft. from my bedroom window. My diesel generator at my home on St. Thomas, VI was louder. I've experienced more outages up here in FL than anticipated so I'm happy to have it. I moved to Lady Lake, just outside the Villages, in Feb. 2017 prior to Irma. It was my 1st time without a whole house generator in decades. Also the last. I love having it, the peace of mind it gives me and having AC and a running internet, refrigerator and stove when there's an outage. We have above ground electric utility poles in my neighborhood. |
How far from your house did they install your new generator?
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Not far. It's alongside the fenced back yard.
15 feet from rear of house with transfer switch directly hooked into the meter. The 1000 lb tank sits behind the generator along the fence as well. |
We've lived here 11 years and have lost power only twice (once for 5 MINUTES and another for 30 MINUTES). We did NOT lose power AT ALL during hurricane Irma. If you've got "money to burn" go ahead and do this, otherwise donate to some worthy cause.
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I've been here 13 years and my power has not ever gone out.
I think I'll pass fixing a problem that I don't seem to have. Interesting though. |
I live in Pine Hills and we lose power all the time. We have installed a Generac whole house generator and it sits alongside the house behind the fence (yes, we are in one of the lucky neighborhoods that has fences.) We dropped the propane tank in the front yard with the pipe tunneled under the driveway. We also installed a gas stove since we now have gas! All approvals and permits were done by Trademark Electric of Ocala. Not a waste of money for us.
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I'm speaking of a Generac that is stationary, hooked up to a propane tank that is underground. Generac also sells portable units that would be able to be heard a block away, no doubt. |
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"The sound output for Generac model #7210 (24 KW) in dB(A) at 23 ft with generator operating at normal load is 67." This is louder than most outside HVAC units. |
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We moved to Florida in December and signed the paperwork in January to have a 24 KW natural gas whole house electric generator installed. There’s a long backlog to get the generator installed. The generator will be installed in mid July.
It’s not cheap to have a whole house electric generator installed. The cost is about $13,000. But if you worked hard in life, obtaining a high income job, and lived well below your means for decades, saving and carefully investing a lot of money for decades. Then spending that kind of money is not a problem in your retirement years, because you can’t take the money with you. We planned on getting a whole house electric generator when we moved to Florida, during our four years of house hunting. We don’t want to risk putting up with possible long power outages. Sweltering without AC, and having everything in the refrigerator and freezer turned into garbage. We have two AC units. One for the master bedroom suite and another for the rest of the house. So, we can limp by if one of the AC units fail. We thought about buying a smaller gasoline generator. But storing many 5 gallon gasoline cans in the garage is not something we’d want to do, for safety reasons. If you owned a small, portable generator, you’d need a concrete slab installed, and a security cage, so it wouldn’t be stolen. Refilling the gasoline tank would be very unpleasant in pouring rain, hurricane force winds, possible debris blowing around that could hit you, and frequent lightning strikes. The generator will be installed on the opposite side of the house from the master bedroom suite, so we won’t hear it much, when it runs. The one concern I had was about the natural gas. If there’s a widespread electric outage, does this impact the pressure in the natural gas distribution system? The answer is, a widespread electric power outage doesn’t impact the natural gas pressure, because the natural gas pressure is maintained my very large generators that are powered by natural gas. There’s a small risk of experiencing a natural gas outage if you were very unlucky, and a downed tree severed the natural gas distribution line. A large buried propane tank is an option, but it would add another $4,000 to the cost of the system, and probably would never be needed. The peace of mind that the whole house natural gas electric electric generator gives us is worth the cost to us, especially because we can easily afford the cost. |
You say gas is not available.
Some of us have gas stoves in our kitchens. I have a gas stove. |
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