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Again, I lived through a mass power outage for a week. I saw the fallacy of large generators in practice when fuel is not readily available. |
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I've thought about one to run the fridge and a portable AC unit, but have not done it.
The reason is not the cost, $500 or less would get what I need, but I don't want to have to deal with the maintenance and gas storage that would be required. I had one up north, and used it for at least a day each year. We were on a well, and I needed to keep the heat running in the winter. Had a basement with sump pumps. Made sense up there. Makes less sense down here. I have an outlet built into one car that would help in a pinch. I also have a lithium ion golf cart with USB outlets that would keep my phones/other items charged for weeks. We have natural gas, so no problem cooking or heating up water. And we have never lost power. I would like to figure out how to put a convenience outlet on the golf cart. So I don't do it. |
Honda 2200w
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nope
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Underground utilities, generators not needed, except maybe for an EMP event.
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I have a quick disconnect gas line at my grill that can be used for a portable Genset. |
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I have a 4,000 that runs on gasoline and propane, because of my Airstream.
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I have one, but feel like a fool for buying it. I lived through three hurricanes in Houston where I had a generator, and all it ever did was increase the misery, as I attempted to manage my limited fuel supply long enough to last a three-week power outage. I always ended up throwing out hundreds of dollars worth of food anyway, and the first time I tried it, I destroyed a fridge from running it on insufficient power.
But I have to admit, it saved my home during the Big Freeze the year we moved here, when a 10 degree day shut down the nuclear reactor and wind mills that power the "oil capital of the world" and a million Houstonians had their homes flooded from burst pipes. I spent that day running around like a mad man with space heaters and light bulbs to keep my pipes from freezing. So, fresh from that experience, and discovering that my new Florida home had natural gas, one of my first purchases was a portable generator big enough to run a fridge, a freezer, and a portable room air conditioner -- that could be run on natural gas. Then I never got around to hiring a plumber to install a valve I could use to connect it because I realized that it would almost certainly be a violation of Marion County's insane building codes and I'd never be able to find a plumber who would agree to do it I also now realize that underground utilities and underground house plumbing makes the odds of a long power outage or my house freezing close to astronomical. Boy, do I feel like a dummy. I ought to just sell the stupid thing. |
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Considering my post was addressed to the guy with a whole house Generac in Sanibel... Like Tommy Lee Jones said in The Fugitive: I don't care. |
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They kick on for a minute or so occasionally to test and then, not again until needed... If there was a widespread loss of power, you're gonna' wish your next door neighbor had one, so you could "stop by" and cool off... |
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