โAug-23-2016 06:32 AM
โAug-28-2016 03:41 AM
2019Keystone,Impact26v-TH,solarpower
,Lithium Batt.. all to take our 2012 Yamaha FJR along to ride..โAug-27-2016 10:08 AM
โAug-26-2016 12:45 PM
โAug-26-2016 08:00 AM
jmadren wrote:gtnsmlr wrote:
AS for the heavy lifting, I installed a 99 dollar HF boom lift to get the genie in and out. It also works great for the hitch and anything else I don't want to hassle picking up. it stows under the bed rail.
Wow, that lift is cool! I didn't know they made one that small and inexpensive.
โAug-26-2016 05:04 AM
gtnsmlr wrote:
AS for the heavy lifting, I installed a 99 dollar HF boom lift to get the genie in and out. It also works great for the hitch and anything else I don't want to hassle picking up. it stows under the bed rail.
โAug-25-2016 08:55 PM
naturist wrote:
In any event, the need for wattage is such that the. More things you power, the less surge wattage matters. An AC requires 2,200 watts to start but only 700 watts to run,so you don't need 4,500 watts to run two ACs, a single 3,000 watt generator will do except in the u likely event both try to start in the same two or three second window of opportunity. If I'm right that 50 amp service is two 25s, then 6,000 watts is enoght to turn everything on at exactly the same time, and with a little thinking about it, the OP could probably live with a 4,500 watt generator. If you guys are right and it's two 50 amp circuits, 12,000 amps will do everything at once and he could probably make do with 7,000 watts.
โAug-25-2016 11:19 AM
โAug-24-2016 01:24 PM
rekoj71 wrote:
Personally I don't see any of these options meeting the "No Hernia", or "small space" requirement, though most will meet the full power as if plugged in requirement.
I lived in Florida for 4 years and yes, power outages can happen after a large storm, but it was still not a real often experience. I only remember twice that a power outage was for a day or two. Granted I was in a sticks and bricks at the time, and we had a small 2700 watt generator, but we were the only ones in our cul-de-sac that even had that, and we only used it to keep the fridge running and to power some fans and to keep our portable electronics charged. We ran extension cords into our house and our two neighbors houses. Obviously we didn't run Air-conditioning, but I'm wondering if you are going to pay a lot of money and used space and headache for something you may barely use. If I was back in Florida and in your shoes I would probably just get a smaller generator that would be enough to run the larger of the two air-conditioners and settle for the short term inconvenience of not having full power. Even a few nights in a hotel outside of the black out zone would be cheaper in the long run.
โAug-23-2016 09:16 PM
โAug-23-2016 06:47 PM
โAug-23-2016 04:45 PM
smkettner wrote:
Yes really. Check the pedestal breakers and the main breakers in your 50a RV.
http://www.myrv.us/electric/Pg/50amp_Service.htm
โAug-23-2016 04:35 PM
โAug-23-2016 04:26 PM
naturist wrote:Yes really. Check the pedestal breakers and the main breakers in your 50a RV.
Uh, you guys sure about that? I thought a 50 amp rig had two 25 amp legs, which would be 6,000 watts. So a 50 amp rig is built to use 4 times the power of a 30 amp rig? Really?
โAug-23-2016 04:20 PM