Forum Discussion
mlts22
Jan 15, 2014Explorer
A 1000 watt generator has two uses in a motorhome for me, especially since it is small enough to be put somewhere in the RV and forgotten about (assuming it is stored properly with a drained carb, the fuel is fresh, oil changed, etc.):
1: Something that is used with a Schumacher charger to get power to the batteries so the onboard genset can be started, if the house batteries are very depleted.
2: If boondocking and the MH doesn't have an inverter, it can be something to power the 120VAC side for low wattage loads. Stick it on Eco-Throttle (where it will chug on its fraction of a gallon gas tank for 12-15 hours), use it for charging laptops, shavers, smartphones, and so on. (This is assuming nobody else is around for etiquette's sake.) It also helps offset the power loss from the RV's furnace fan if someone doesn't have a solar charger or many amp-hours.
As an emergency generator or one just to power low loads without having to fire up the main genset, having a small 1000 watt Honda can come very much in handy.
1: Something that is used with a Schumacher charger to get power to the batteries so the onboard genset can be started, if the house batteries are very depleted.
2: If boondocking and the MH doesn't have an inverter, it can be something to power the 120VAC side for low wattage loads. Stick it on Eco-Throttle (where it will chug on its fraction of a gallon gas tank for 12-15 hours), use it for charging laptops, shavers, smartphones, and so on. (This is assuming nobody else is around for etiquette's sake.) It also helps offset the power loss from the RV's furnace fan if someone doesn't have a solar charger or many amp-hours.
As an emergency generator or one just to power low loads without having to fire up the main genset, having a small 1000 watt Honda can come very much in handy.
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