How long is a flexible nat gas hose can you realistically run? That's my big hold up on this whole thing at the moment, my gas is very far from my panel
drumboy said:AgLiving06 said:
After the freeze, I got serious about my setup. It powers my whole house (4 ton ac with hard start). My brother has 2 ac's and his 12000 version just powered both on nat gas.
If I had to guess, this all in for me was $3500. The more handy you are the cheaper it could be done. I wanted to make sure everything was done right and I have no desire to mess with electrical.
Setup
Duromax 13000EH (with conversion to tri-fuel). They now offer a tri-fuel 13,000kw.
50A interlock
3/4 inch nat gas line
Quick connect on the natural gas meter for the house to connect to.
50A RV connection from my generator to the interlock
Whole home surge protector
I also have ~120 lbs of propane and 3- 5 gallon gas cans.
The primary upside of the tri-fuel over a whole home generator is the fuel flexibility and cost. If for some reason natural gas hit a pinch point, you have other alternatives.
The primary downside is you have to set it up yourself which during a big storm could mean waiting a bit.
There was concern expressed about THD. This is from Duromax website:Quote:
DuroMax portable generators will output an industry standard total harmonic distortion (THD) rating of about 12%-20% depending on load applied. They will produce a sine wave, not a modified or square wave. This is perfectly acceptable for running common commodities found in your home such as TVs, computers, your appliances, etc.
THD is a measure of the deviation of a sine wave from a "perfect" sine wave. All electricity, including power company electricity, has measurable THD.
If you have a specific item that requires less than 5% THD such as a UPS style battery backup, a pellet stove, or high efficiency furnace control board, we recommend purchasing a DuroMax Inverter Generator that provides a less than 5% THD.
An inverter currently doesn't have tri-fuel options (not sure if it can be added), and it's quite a bit more expensive, but if you have a real sensitive equipment that you must use during an outage, that's the best option. You can just plan to spend an extra thousand or 2.
How long does the 120 lbs of propane last?
terradactylexpress said:
Interesting, I think I need about 75' but still probably a cheaper solution than a home generator
I have a 12kW dual fuel which backfeeds my panel through a 50A interlock, with 4 ton AC unit, two fridges, washer, gas dryer, etc. I have 120# of propane on hand at all times and was able to refill gas tanks starting Friday morning after the storm until my power came back on Monday evening (~4 days total time).AgLiving06 said:drumboy said:AgLiving06 said:
After the freeze, I got serious about my setup. It powers my whole house (4 ton ac with hard start). My brother has 2 ac's and his 12000 version just powered both on nat gas.
If I had to guess, this all in for me was $3500. The more handy you are the cheaper it could be done. I wanted to make sure everything was done right and I have no desire to mess with electrical.
Setup
Duromax 13000EH (with conversion to tri-fuel). They now offer a tri-fuel 13,000kw.
50A interlock
3/4 inch nat gas line
Quick connect on the natural gas meter for the house to connect to.
50A RV connection from my generator to the interlock
Whole home surge protector
I also have ~120 lbs of propane and 3- 5 gallon gas cans.
The primary upside of the tri-fuel over a whole home generator is the fuel flexibility and cost. If for some reason natural gas hit a pinch point, you have other alternatives.
The primary downside is you have to set it up yourself which during a big storm could mean waiting a bit.
There was concern expressed about THD. This is from Duromax website:Quote:
DuroMax portable generators will output an industry standard total harmonic distortion (THD) rating of about 12%-20% depending on load applied. They will produce a sine wave, not a modified or square wave. This is perfectly acceptable for running common commodities found in your home such as TVs, computers, your appliances, etc.
THD is a measure of the deviation of a sine wave from a "perfect" sine wave. All electricity, including power company electricity, has measurable THD.
If you have a specific item that requires less than 5% THD such as a UPS style battery backup, a pellet stove, or high efficiency furnace control board, we recommend purchasing a DuroMax Inverter Generator that provides a less than 5% THD.
An inverter currently doesn't have tri-fuel options (not sure if it can be added), and it's quite a bit more expensive, but if you have a real sensitive equipment that you must use during an outage, that's the best option. You can just plan to spend an extra thousand or 2.
How long does the 120 lbs of propane last?
I've never run it all at once. I use the propane for maintenance running (i.e. after oil change, spark plug change, run it every couple months). If the outage is sustained (storm, planned outage, etc), I just go straight to natural gas.
I've also never run gasoline in it and hope to never have to.
However, one guy posted in the facebook generator group this:
"Total outage time 115 hours. Total generator run time 97.25 hours. Total average fuel usage 2.29#/ hour, approximately 225# of propane total, cost $135. Firman T07571, purchased 2020, 30 amp interlock hook up running whole house including AC."
So 120 lbs should roughly last 50-52 hours or so.
I have a whole home generator (installed by previous owner) and I will second this. I've been in my house for 6 years and the most I have used it at once was for about 24 hours. Other than that, most of the time has been 20 minutes here and there with a couple 3-6 hour stints in there.Ag_07 said:
Waste of money
Way more cost efficient to just get a portable generator (gas, propane, or hard plumbed from the nat gas line) big enough to power the essentials and get a electrician to set up with breakers.
Easy and way cheaper
Back when we'd tailgate the A&M games a decade or so ago, my dad bought 2 Honda EU2000's and a parallel kit to power my uncle's camper that he'd bring to Reed. They also bought an extended run gas kit so they'd only have to fill that up on the way to CS.Quote:
The cheapest option and best option is a Honda EU2200. Nothing offers the bang for the buck that offers. Going from zero to ~1800 kilowatts to run a fridge, lamps, fans, and charge electronics while sipping a gallon of gas every 12 hours is an insane boost for about a grand.
I honestly think every home in this area should have one.
This is what my dad uses now to run his RV when they go places that do not have hookups and he loves it (he has the 3500). Quiet and reliable. Also, if there's an issue, Harbor Freight is easy to find.drumboy said:
Anyone have experience with the Predator inverter generators from HarborFreight?
My Honda EG3500 has been great but I'd like something bigger, quieter, and burns less fuel. Thinking of getting two of these to daisy chain.
https://www.harborfreight.com/generators-engines/generators/5000-watt-dual-fuel-super-quiet-inverter-generator-with-remote-start-and-co-secure-technology-70143.html
AgLiving06 said:
After the freeze, I got serious about my setup. It powers my whole house (4 ton ac with hard start). My brother has 2 ac's and his 12000 version just powered both on nat gas.
If I had to guess, this all in for me was $3500. The more handy you are the cheaper it could be done. I wanted to make sure everything was done right and I have no desire to mess with electrical.
Setup
Duromax 13000EH (with conversion to tri-fuel). They now offer a tri-fuel 13,000kw.
50A interlock
3/4 inch nat gas line
Quick connect on the natural gas meter for the house to connect to.
50A RV connection from my generator to the interlock
Whole home surge protector
I also have ~120 lbs of propane and 3- 5 gallon gas cans.
The primary upside of the tri-fuel over a whole home generator is the fuel flexibility and cost. If for some reason natural gas hit a pinch point, you have other alternatives.
The primary downside is you have to set it up yourself which during a big storm could mean waiting a bit.
There was concern expressed about THD. This is from Duromax website:Quote:
DuroMax portable generators will output an industry standard total harmonic distortion (THD) rating of about 12%-20% depending on load applied. They will produce a sine wave, not a modified or square wave. This is perfectly acceptable for running common commodities found in your home such as TVs, computers, your appliances, etc.
THD is a measure of the deviation of a sine wave from a "perfect" sine wave. All electricity, including power company electricity, has measurable THD.
If you have a specific item that requires less than 5% THD such as a UPS style battery backup, a pellet stove, or high efficiency furnace control board, we recommend purchasing a DuroMax Inverter Generator that provides a less than 5% THD.
An inverter currently doesn't have tri-fuel options (not sure if it can be added), and it's quite a bit more expensive, but if you have a real sensitive equipment that you must use during an outage, that's the best option. You can just plan to spend an extra thousand or 2.
AJ02 said:
I'd like to go the portable generator route that powers whole home. We have a variable speed AC which I'm told means we should have no trouble getting it to start up on the generator, even without a soft start installed. (Variable speed AC is basically a built-in soft start.)
Problem is, THD on a portable is likely too high for the sensitive electronics in our Carrier Infinity AC system. Not sure how to get around that with a portable generator. I'm told it needs to be less than 5% to comfortably avoid damaging any sensitive electronics. The portable is probably between 12-20%.
Anyone else have any experience with a portable generator and running a pretty sensitive variable speed AC?
one MEEN Ag said:
I've done now two whole house generator installs. My parents and then mine.
Biggest 'hidden' cost drivers are:
-How close are your gas and electrical lines together
-How far away to do you want to put the generator from the house
When I went with a generac supercenter quote it assumed that the gas and electrical panels are within 15 feet of each other and that the generator is also within the same 15 feet. That can get expensive in a hurry if they are not.
lancevance said:
First quote
Cibalo said:lancevance said:
First quote
How big are your A/C units and do you have electric stove and water heaters? That quote is $7k more than what I paid for a 20kw that can run my two 4 ton units and I can run all the lights and TV and use the electric dryer and microwave at the same time. I can pretty much do anything in my house as long as I don't want to do everything at one time.
lancevance said:Cibalo said:lancevance said:
First quote
How big are your A/C units and do you have electric stove and water heaters? That quote is $7k more than what I paid for a 20kw that can run my two 4 ton units and I can run all the lights and TV and use the electric dryer and microwave at the same time. I can pretty much do anything in my house as long as I don't want to do everything at one time.
Single AC, 3 ton ( I think). Dryer, water heater and stove are gas. Yeah I think this quote is too high. I will keep looking.
P.H. Dexippus said:lancevance said:Cibalo said:lancevance said:
First quote
How big are your A/C units and do you have electric stove and water heaters? That quote is $7k more than what I paid for a 20kw that can run my two 4 ton units and I can run all the lights and TV and use the electric dryer and microwave at the same time. I can pretty much do anything in my house as long as I don't want to do everything at one time.
Single AC, 3 ton ( I think). Dryer, water heater and stove are gas. Yeah I think this quote is too high. I will keep looking.
You could handle that easily with a portable for a fraction of the price.