Hi,
Your factory charger is probably rated at 45 - 65 amps, and will charge the battery much faster than a typical portable charger.
That said, without knowing the generator capacity, I would not know if you would overload the generator or not. A typical 'contractor' generator will be well over 2000 watts, and not overloaded by either charger. If the generator is less than 1,500 watts, write back for further information.
If the generator is over 2,000 watts, let everyone know that you will be OK, so we do not have a lot of people answering a question that has already been solved.
While you state "All LED lights" - most of the power you might be using will be actually by the CO meter and propane leak detector. Those loads and the refrigerator add up to about 35 amp hours per day!
The water pump is really insignificant, as it will pump 2 GPM while using 7 amps per hour, or empty a 120 gallon tank with just 7AH of power.
LED lights also are a insignificant load, using just 0.4 amps each. While in years past perhaps the lights in your pop up might have used 1.2 or 0.9 amps each, depending on the bulb size, it would have been important to reduce light usage.
My suggestion is find out the generator hours. You do not want to disturb your neighbors running the generator late into the night, but run the furnace while the generator is on - if you have that need. The furnace fan typically is about 7 amps per hour, and can use 35 AH daily by itself, and really drain the battery.
You might have a smaller group 24 battery with a 'lab' rating of 85 AH or about 60 on a good day, but perhaps only 50 AH on a cold night. Group 27 will have a 105 AH rating, or about 75 on a cold night.
I have a Olympic Catalytic Heater that I run all night long, not consuming any power. I have to leave a roof vent open a bit, and window too. This brings in a constant stream of cold air, but overall I can keep it at 70F inside while it is 30F outside. When colder, I also run the furnace a few minutes every hour, to blow warm air into the basement and keep it warm too. Then my water tanks will not freeze. The furnace has a 1" diameter air duct into my basement compartment, near the tanks, to keep them warm.
Good luck,
Fred.
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