Well, it is worth mentioning that you can go broke very fast running a a generator. ALL of them consume ALOT of fuel. Size your unit small, enough to keep the "basics" running (this will vary by your water, heat and other systems) We have a well (175')and hot water NG heat (back up of whole house woodburner).We dont need that much (no BIG freezer full of meat,..etc..) I could and will have a Mil Surplus diesel M701A (3KW, about 40-50 amp, mil unrates them), I also have a BIG Onan 10KW that runs on NG. I dont need or want the BIG one, but will likely have it hooked up (got it on barter from a buddy who pulled it from a hospital). I dont anticipate using the 10KW much likely the little Army jobber. I keep around 300 gallon of "off road" diesel here. It does keep for years and years. It is also my Bug Out fuel for a crew cab dually diesel truck to get he family out of harms way if necessary, that is 2400# of fuel plus water 2400# plus gear, so you can see why a dually (with canopied army trailer). There are some small pull start diesels, usually Yanmars, single cylinder, asd stated with compression release. I had a mil surplus water pump here with a pull start, fired right up. It is hard to go ALL diesel, diesel camp stoves are hard to find, and if you need to cut trees you GOTTA have gasoline. Gasoline goes bad quickly now due to Ethynol in it. It is also very hard on small engines and some folks have come out with additives that help (that is another discussion). The fine for running "dyed" off road diesel on the road is $10,000, THAT is right 10K. So, I would only do that in an emergency. The only person I ever heard that "got off" on the dyed diesel was a "Farm Truck" that was legally on the highway within 125 miles of the farm on a delivery, and that was only a fluke as the judge was reasonable, and claim was legit.
Do your homework and size your genset smallish. Even my little 3KW runs 1/2 gallon per hour, so that is $48 per day!!! The big ones will put you in the poor house. Propane is OUT, there is no way to keep the tank from "frosting/icing" if you were to try to run a genset in the winter, and it cant be reasonably kept, this info is from a buddy who ran a very LARGE statewide propane business (he was the western Pa. operations manager). Even my blacksmithing forge has issues in summer time with icing up and has to put in a large water tank (propane tank is 100#), so large tank. NG lines stay pressurized nearly all the time, power or not. Many wells are coming out of the ground with such pressure that it has to be metered down upon entering the "system" domestic and cross country pipelines, and any and all compression stations have gensets on standby. If you CAN NG, go NG
Ironwood
Edited by Ironwood (11/06/12 04:30 AM)