[CTSARA] Fw: Generators

jonsolomon at techie.com jonsolomon at techie.com
Mon Mar 22 07:51:23 EDT 2010


 When all is said and done, this is the IDEAL way to run a genny (except maybe in earth-quake prone areas where gas may be shut off).  A self starting, auto-transfering, natural gas powered (large) genny will always save the day and you never have to worry about refueling.  I know a couple of people who are lucky enough to have natural gas, and far enough out that the often lose power that have either executed this or looked into.

 
But you can't bring them to field day ;)


 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: jon at giciman.com
To: ctsara at mailman.qth.net
Sent: Sun, Mar 21, 2010 9:41 pm
Subject: [CTSARA] Fw: Generators



Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: Jon Perelstein <jperelst at yahoo.com>
Date: Sun, 21 Mar 2010 18:36:59 
To: Jonathan Shapiro<jon at giciman.com>
Subject: Re: Generators

One cylinder at 7kVA??  Wow.

You may want to resend this to everyone, it's very interesting and might wake up 
some of the people who think that they can work with 2kVA.

Jon
KB1QBZ

--- On Sun, 3/21/10, Jonathan Shapiro <jon at giciman.com> wrote:

From: Jonathan Shapiro <jon at giciman.com>
Subject: Re: Generators
To: "Jon Perelstein" <jperelst at yahoo.com>
Date: Sunday, March 21, 2010, 8:37 PM

I installed a one cylinder Winco generator, 7 kVA, which I bought from North 
East Generators 24 years ago. It runs on natural gas. It is installed on 
concrete blocks in my basement and exhausts outside via stainless steel piping. 
A window exhaust fan kicks on when the generator is running via a solid state 
relay in parallel with the fan switch.
I would like to get a larger unit outside- 20 kVA to run the whole house. If 
they get too big they will outstrip the gas supply.

It is hard wired into my house with a built in transfer switch and a sub panel 
for the protected circuits.
It was primarily to protect the basement and power the sump pumps, which would 
only be needed in a big storm.
There are folks who install sump pumps, and forget the power goes out when the 
pumps are needed most
This generator has saved me numerous times and while it runs when the lines come 
down, it ran for 6 days after a Northeaster about 1995 or so.
During this storm it ran for 30 hours.

It runs:  2 sump pumps, 1 refrigerator, bedroom and hall lights, outside lights, 
and I can turn on the toaster oven or the coffee maker as well. It also powers 
the furnace.
Survival was easy.

Stay Dry
Jonathan  Shapiro
AB1HI

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