Any recomendations for a portable 240v capable generator around the 2000 watt range? The quiet inverter Honda 2000is would probably be ideal, but they are 120v only.
Sitting here in Colorado with the wind & snow howling watching the power flicker a bit in the worst blizzard in years.
I'm part way through re-wiring a 35kw PTO generator (dont ask how long). Appropriate manual generator disconnect has been installed for a long time. It would be nice to have a decent small generator to run the furnace & well. I'd also end up using it for camping.
Furnace plate says 600 watts. I stuck my clamp on amp meter on the both wires going to the well pump & got 1.3@ with a peak of 1.5. Under 400 watts seemed pretty low for a 200' or so well, but I triple checked things. The relay box has 1-1.5hp stamped on it, which would be around 1,200 watts tops. It's a cheap meter I don't use much, but should at least be in the right ballpark. At any rate 2,000 watts should run the furnace, well & a few lights. The only monkey wrench is the well is 220v.
If I want to cook dinner, arc weld or power the neighborhood I can finish rewiring the PTO generator & burn lots of diesel running it on the tractor. Looking for something reliable & fuel efficient while being portable when I dont need the big unit.
Any recomendations for a small quiet portable unit that does 120/240v? I'm guessing probably an inverter unit.
For 240v, I think of 5kw gens as the general lower limit. Honda does have a 4kw Commercial unit
https://powerequipment.honda.ca/generators/commercial-4000-gfci but it's pricier than many 5kw units.
A small suitcase 2kw is very useful, because of it's easy portability, and typically gentle fuel consumption, but don't expect to find 240Vac support. Honda, Yamaha, Champion and others offer products of that style.
For your well, you might consider a dedicated DC/AC inverter, with appropriate batteries. One example:
Aims PWRINV5K2412W 5 Watt 12V 24VAC 6HZ | Inverters R Us
Note that it ^ is 240Vac only. I have no experience with that make/model, just citing it as a price point..... split-phase ones are available (240/120 output), for more money.....
Briggs used to have a table in their olde printed manuals, that gave you some idea of the relationship between Starting Watts required, vs. Running Watts...... it's a lot higher than most people expect, and not readily captured with what most people have at home for instrumentation.
Couldn't find that Briggs table online.... but found something better......
What Size Generator Do You Need?
Generic ^, but informative if you haven't seen something like it before. Furnace Fan has quite a range, as one example of Surge.....
Clean voltage output is desirable in general, obviously, but the above table highlights how easy it is to unintentionally create mini/fast brownouts with a small gen..... they might get condemned for "cleanliness", when it's nothing more than (very) short-term overload causing problems......
Rgds, D.