downsizingnow48
Elite Member
I bet you're right about that.That looks like my old Generac, re-branded I would guess.
I bet you're right about that.That looks like my old Generac, re-branded I would guess.
I just bought a Durostar 10k for 750 from amazon. I haven't run it for an extended period but I've load tested it and run some tools and monitored the output voltage and everything seemed good.
Amazon.com : Durostar DS1E, 8 Running Watts/1 Starting Watts, Gas Powered Portable Generator : Duromax Generators : Patio, Lawn & Garden
I'm building a shed on the house where it will live plugged in to the transfer switch, but I can unplug it and move it about if needed.
Will that Duromax Generator run the unnecessary appliances like a coffee maker, microwave, toaster oven? As of right now now I'm running my 15 year old Generac 7500/12000 surge watts, but it would never run those appliances for some reason. It seems to run the necessary stuff like a 220v water pump, fridge, freezer, lights, laptop and 47" TV. The biggest complaint is it's not quiet, that's why I'm thinking of upgrading.
So how come this is the only ONE realistic priced generator that's mention here with a link? The only other one mention here with the comparable wattage is Honda at a nickel under 4k, are you nuts, that's for people who dont mind buying $100.00 shirts and thinks that's a good deal, no Honda for me.
I'm not nuts, I just like HIGH QUALITY RELIABLE tools, I get a huge enjoyment from owning them! AND I'm willing to save more, to own them...The only other one mention here with the comparable wattage is Honda at a nickel under 4k, are you nuts, that's for people who dont mind buying $100.00 shirts and thinks that's a good deal, no Honda for me.
Something unusual here. If it runs all of that other stuff, it should run coffee, toaster, etc. All of them are likely 1000-1100 watts.
Could it be that you have a lot of other things running when you try to make coffee ?
Paul
I'm not nuts, I just like HIGH QUALITY RELIABLE tools, I get a huge enjoyment from owning them! AND I'm willing to save more, to own them...
In this case, the OTHER advantages are, MUCH quieter operation and cheaper to run too... SO, make mine a Honda pleaseeee!
BTW, I wear cheeeeeper old shirts too. lol
SR
My brother has a Generac and it does a good job for him, it's not as quiet as a Honda, burns more fuel than a Honda and doesn't have some of the Honda features...You saying that the Durostar and or Generac generators are junk, to me it's like comparing Ford with Chevy, Dodge or Nissan vs Toyota. Honda no longer has the corner market on ATVs...........and you probably ware cheap shirts with $100.00 paints, your turn.......................
Will that Duromax Generator run the unnecessary appliances like a coffee maker, microwave, toaster oven? As of right now now I'm running my 15 year old Generac 7500/12000 surge watts, but it would never run those appliances for some reason. It seems to run the necessary stuff like a 220v water pump, fridge, freezer, lights, laptop and 47" TV. The biggest complaint is it's not quiet, that's why I'm thinking of upgrading.
So how come this is the only ONE realistic priced generator that's mention here with a link? The only other one mention here with the comparable wattage is Honda at a nickel under 4k, are you nuts, that's for people who dont mind buying $100.00 shirts and thinks that's a good deal, no Honda for me.
Prevents bogging the generator when the women turn on the electric stove or clothes dryer, no matter how many times you told them not to.If you tie the two hots together how do you prevent 220v appliance problems?
I've done it during construction but only after disconnecting/eliminating 220v loads...
A couple years back just before a "storm of the century" (we were supposed to get a ton of rain - ton for this area not Houston mind you) I bought a Generac GP3300. I think over the next few days we got half an inch of rain...
More recently, though, we had a wildfire right next door and had to evacuate; the fire was cause by a power line failure in high winds, and so obviously we had no power. 36 hours after evac I went back and fired up the generator (it had been stored with stabilized fuel) to cool the fridge & freezer (and then left, as we were still under mandatory evacuation; waved at the firefighters as they drove by).
It fired right up, very nice. Unfortunately, one of the fridges starting kept popping the generator's breaker; I finally got it to run and it cooled everything off well. It didn't seem to mind the well pump or the deep freeze.
Yesterday I tried to use the generator to run a saw where I was doing some work (wife wants a dock for the pond), and the generator adamantly refused to run the saw. I did some reading and apparently you need to rate your generator for about 4x the amps for starting? idk, the 15A breaker in my garage doesn't pop when I run the saw.
So, I'm going to sell the unit. Anyone want a barely-used generator? I guess I need to determine the actual starting watts/amps required to run my stuff... I liked the idea of the 3300W because of fuel efficiency, it seems silly having a 7KW generator to run a couple things just because you need a lot to start, but I guess it is what it is.
Prevents bogging the generator when the women turn on the electric stove or clothes dryer, no matter how many times you told them not to.
Yikes, $150? They can keep it.
http://apelectric.com/champion-1003...MIhrL4zpyZ1wIVFgaGCh0DcAzYEAQYBiABEgJjivD_BwE