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#41
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John H. Wrote in message:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 16:45:15 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 4:29 PM, Tim wrote: John H On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:27:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 2:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 12:14 PM, wrote: - show quoted text - That is the good thing about propane. It doesn't go bad. The problem is it may be hard to come by and very expensive after a storm. My generator will run both. I forgot that Harry looks down at little, gasoline powered generators because *he* has a big, whole house generator, supplied by a 1,000 gal propane underground tank. It starts once a week, runs for 10 minutes and shuts off, similar to my neighbor's generator whole house generator he installed three years ago. My neighbor is actually hoping for a longer term power outage just so he can justify the investment he made. I've used my generator twice since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, not counting the summer the stone cutters used it everyday when installing the pool. Each power outage was of relatively short duration and we got by just fine with it. I don't look down my nose at gasoline powered generators. I don't know if a gasoline-powered generator is available in the size we have that would be adequate to run one of our furnace/heat pumps, the well pump, and some appliances and lights. The well pump and heat pump require a substantial generator to start up and run. In the winter, if you don't have some heat available, the water pipes in the walls can freeze. Fixing that would cost a lot more than a generator. Oh, it's a 500-gallon buried tank. We did have one four-to-five day power outage in which the genny served us well. Do you honestly think you need all that when there's a power outage? Most of us could live with a couple space heaters, refrigerator, and some lights. Worried about water in pipes? Drain 'em. Buy some bottled water. Fill the bathtubs for the toilet. You're a mess. If you just have to have running water, leave the faucet trickling. I doesn't get into the negative numbers around here very much, especially in racist southern MD where you live. ........ John, some people don’t have a survivalists sense. Bad when their total life is dependent on others taking care of them.... Why should I want to be a right-wing survivalist when our generator keeps us comfortable, winter or summer, if there is a power outage? Doesn't your idiot buddy Johnny**** carry or use a generator in his motel room on wheels? Can't he put his dog or wife on a treadmill to generate whatever electricity he needs, and can't he poop in the woods? Leaving the water trickling isn't much of a solution when the water in the pipes comes from a well that has a 220 volt pump motor 225 feet underground. When we build our next house, we'll have a propane-fueled permanent generator there, too. If you had balls, you'd ask me yourself! Didn't mean to **** you off so badly. :) Yes you did. :-) -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#43
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On 9/14/2018 4:14 PM, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:04:59 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 9/14/2018 12:04 PM, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 11:50 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 11:43 AM, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 11:28 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 10:50 AM, Its Me wrote: On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:47:42 AM UTC-4, John H wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 21:34:54 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote: Well, after we had to evacuate the house for nearly a week while new hardwoods were being laid, sanded and finished,we are back in the house today just in time for Florence. At this time the biggest worry is power outage... the storm is down to a Cat 1, but is moving so slowly it will dump lots of rain.Â* We're on a hill so no worries of flooding, but power is a concern with a well. Should have pulled the trigger on a gen, but we've briefly lost power twice in ten years, so it hasn't been at the top of the list. Work is 10 minutes away, and we have a huge gen, kitchen and showers so really no big deal.Â* Plus I have about 5 ways to cook without electricity, so we are OK. Hope anyone in the path fairs well.Â* I'll probably just spend my time painting the newly remodeled parts.Â* All new appliances next Tuesday!Â* Then we'll have a complete kitchen again after almost 3 months.Â* Whew! I've heard nothing but good about this generator from the RV crowd. https://www.harborfreight.com/3500-w...tor-63584.html As soon as I find a buyer for my Honda 2200, I'm getting the Predator. Thanks, but I need 240V@30A to run the well pump. I don't necessarily need 240v (split phase) but if my Honda ever gives up the ghost I'll shop for one. Speaking of the Honda ... I just pulled it out of the storage shed and gave it three pulls.Â* Fired right up.Â* Last time it was used was last winter when we lost power for a couple of days.Â* Still has the same gas in it that it had then with a splash of Stabil in it.Â* I have it running right now, trying to run it out of gas so I can use fresh gas if and when I need it again.Â* It's just purring away on the old gas. So much for the stories that gas goes bad in a month or two.Â* It may lose some of it's BTU's so an engine can't develop it's full HP rating but I see no evidence of that.Â* I put a 1500 watt space heater on it as a load so it burns the gas faster and it runs just fine. Ahh, you put Stabil in your generator's tank and the gas was good enough to start up and run your generator and therefore "So much for the stories that gas goes bad in a month or two." Gotta love that scientific methodology. http://funkyimg.com/i/2Le5c.jpg Universal truth from a single observation? Just an additional data point from the time the generator sat for five years unused with gas in it. (again, used some Stabil). After all that time it ran, although it took extra pulls for it to fire up. Once running, it burned up the five year old gas with no problems. I am in the habit of adding Stabil to the gas storage jug immediately after I fill it with fresh gas. In that way the generator always has treated gas and it has always fired up and run fine after long periods of sitting (i.e. 5 years). Just my experience and only with the little Honda generator. Works for me. Doing the same now with the gas I use in the little scooter, based on the luck I've had with the generator. The only difference is that the scooter uses high test (93 octane) gas. When it's time to put the motorcycle away for the winter, I'll do the same for it. In fact, the owner's manual for the Suzuki specifically says to fill the tank with fresh gas, add an appropriate amount of fuel stabilizer (the manual recommends Stabil), run the motorcycle for a while to distribute the treated gas throughout the fuel system including the fuel injectors before permanently storing the motorcycle. Are you up in Connecticut now or down south with us racists? Why put the bike up for the winter. There's usually a bunch of great riding days in the winter, at least around here. I just keep it ready to go all the time. I am still in Massachusetts, not too far from the beginning of Cape Cod. I am not a big fan of cold weather riding. I bought the motorcycle more as an impulse buy anyway. Might keep it, might not. We'll see. Actually, I enjoy riding the little scooter but it's not all that comfortable for longer rides. |
#44
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posted to rec.boats
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On 9/14/2018 4:22 PM, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:27:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 2:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 12:14 PM, wrote: On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 11:28:55 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 9/14/2018 10:50 AM, Its Me wrote: On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:47:42 AM UTC-4, John H wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 21:34:54 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote: Well, after we had to evacuate the house for nearly a week while new hardwoods were being laid, sanded and finished,we are back in the house today just in time for Florence. At this time the biggest worry is power outage... the storm is down to a Cat 1, but is moving so slowly it will dump lots of rain.Â* We're on a hill so no worries of flooding, but power is a concern with a well. Should have pulled the trigger on a gen, but we've briefly lost power twice in ten years, so it hasn't been at the top of the list. Work is 10 minutes away, and we have a huge gen, kitchen and showers so really no big deal.Â* Plus I have about 5 ways to cook without electricity, so we are OK. Hope anyone in the path fairs well.Â* I'll probably just spend my time painting the newly remodeled parts.Â* All new appliances next Tuesday!Â* Then we'll have a complete kitchen again after almost 3 months.Â* Whew! I've heard nothing but good about this generator from the RV crowd. https://www.harborfreight.com/3500-w...tor-63584.html As soon as I find a buyer for my Honda 2200, I'm getting the Predator. Thanks, but I need 240V@30A to run the well pump. I don't necessarily need 240v (split phase) but if my Honda ever gives up the ghost I'll shop for one. Speaking of the Honda ... I just pulled it out of the storage shed and gave it three pulls.Â* Fired right up.Â* Last time it was used was last winter when we lost power for a couple of days.Â* Still has the same gas in it that it had then with a splash of Stabil in it.Â* I have it running right now, trying to run it out of gas so I can use fresh gas if and when I need it again.Â* It's just purring away on the old gas. So much for the stories that gas goes bad in a month or two.Â* It may lose some of it's BTU's so an engine can't develop it's full HP rating but I see no evidence of that.Â* I put a 1500 watt space heater on it as a load so it burns the gas faster and it runs just fine. That is the good thing about propane. It doesn't go bad. The problem is it may be hard to come by and very expensive after a storm. My generator will run both. I forgot that Harry looks down at little, gasoline powered generators because *he* has a big, whole house generator, supplied by a 1,000 gal propane underground tank.Â* It starts once a week, runs for 10 minutes and shuts off, similar to my neighbor's generator whole house generator he installed three years ago. My neighbor is actually hoping for a longer term power outage just so he can justify the investment he made. I've used my generator twice since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, not counting the summer the stone cutters used it everyday when installing the pool. Each power outage was of relatively short duration and we got by just fine with it. I don't look down my nose at gasoline powered generators. I don't know if a gasoline-powered generator is available in the size we have that would be adequate to run one of our furnace/heat pumps, the well pump, and some appliances and lights. The well pump and heat pump require a substantial generator to start up and run. In the winter, if you don't have some heat available, the water pipes in the walls can freeze. Fixing that would cost a lot more than a generator. Oh, it's a 500-gallon buried tank. We did have one four-to-five day power outage in which the genny served us well. Do you honestly think you need all that when there's a power outage? Most of us could live with a couple space heaters, refrigerator, and some lights. Worried about water in pipes? Drain 'em. Buy some bottled water. Fill the bathtubs for the toilet. You're a mess. If you just have to have running water, leave the faucet trickling. I doesn't get into the negative numbers around here very much, especially in racist southern MD where you live. In an insulated house up my way it takes far more than a day or two of temps near zero or below to start being concerned with frozen pipes. Don't think it gets that cold in Harry's neck of the woods. |
#45
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posted to rec.boats
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John H
On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 07:50:06 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote:Â* On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:47:42 AM UTC-4, John H wrote:Â* On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 21:34:54 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote:Â* Â* Well, after we had to evacuate the house for nearly a week while new hardwoods were being laid, sanded and finished,we are back in the house today just in time for Florence. At this time the biggest worry is power outage.... the storm is down to a Cat 1, but is moving so slowly it will dump lots of rain. Â*We're on a hill so no worries of flooding, but power is a concern with a well. Should have pulled the trigger on a gen, but we've briefly lost power twice in ten years, so it hasn't been at the top of the list. Work is 10 minutes away, and we have a huge gen, kitchen and showers so really no big deal. Â*Plus I have about 5 ways to cook without electricity, so we are OK.Â* Â* Hope anyone in the path fairs well. Â*I'll probably just spend my time painting the newly remodeled parts. Â*All new appliances next Tuesday! Â*Then we'll have a complete kitchen again after almost 3 months. Â*Whew!Â* Â* I've heard nothing but good about this generator from the RV crowd.Â* Â* Â*https://www.harborfreight.com/3500-w...r-63584.htmlÂ* Â* As soon as I find a buyer for my Honda 2200, I'm getting the Predator.Â* Â* Thanks, but I need 240V@30A to run the well pump.Â* "Sold the Honda today. But, Harbor Freight is out of the generator I want. Actually, they're out ofÂ* all generators. Hope we don't lose power for too long. I think our longest outage, in 27 years withÂ* this company, has been for about four hours."Â* Duh! Considering we're in the middle of hurricane season, it might gave been prudent to get the new generator and test drive it before selling the Honda. |
#46
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posted to rec.boats
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On 9/14/18 6:03 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 9/14/2018 4:22 PM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:27:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 2:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 12:14 PM, wrote: On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 11:28:55 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 9/14/2018 10:50 AM, Its Me wrote: On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:47:42 AM UTC-4, John H wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 21:34:54 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote: Well, after we had to evacuate the house for nearly a week while new hardwoods were being laid, sanded and finished,we are back in the house today just in time for Florence. At this time the biggest worry is power outage... the storm is down to a Cat 1, but is moving so slowly it will dump lots of rain.Â* We're on a hill so no worries of flooding, but power is a concern with a well. Should have pulled the trigger on a gen, but we've briefly lost power twice in ten years, so it hasn't been at the top of the list. Work is 10 minutes away, and we have a huge gen, kitchen and showers so really no big deal.Â* Plus I have about 5 ways to cook without electricity, so we are OK. Hope anyone in the path fairs well.Â* I'll probably just spend my time painting the newly remodeled parts.Â* All new appliances next Tuesday!Â* Then we'll have a complete kitchen again after almost 3 months.Â* Whew! I've heard nothing but good about this generator from the RV crowd. https://www.harborfreight.com/3500-w...tor-63584.html As soon as I find a buyer for my Honda 2200, I'm getting the Predator. Thanks, but I need 240V@30A to run the well pump. I don't necessarily need 240v (split phase) but if my Honda ever gives up the ghost I'll shop for one. Speaking of the Honda ... I just pulled it out of the storage shed and gave it three pulls.Â* Fired right up.Â* Last time it was used was last winter when we lost power for a couple of days.Â* Still has the same gas in it that it had then with a splash of Stabil in it.Â* I have it running right now, trying to run it out of gas so I can use fresh gas if and when I need it again.Â* It's just purring away on the old gas. So much for the stories that gas goes bad in a month or two.Â* It may lose some of it's BTU's so an engine can't develop it's full HP rating but I see no evidence of that.Â* I put a 1500 watt space heater on it as a load so it burns the gas faster and it runs just fine. That is the good thing about propane. It doesn't go bad. The problem is it may be hard to come by and very expensive after a storm. My generator will run both. I forgot that Harry looks down at little, gasoline powered generators because *he* has a big, whole house generator, supplied by a 1,000 gal propane underground tank.Â* It starts once a week, runs for 10 minutes and shuts off, similar to my neighbor's generator whole house generator he installed three years ago. My neighbor is actually hoping for a longer term power outage just so he can justify the investment he made. I've used my generator twice since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, not counting the summer the stone cutters used it everyday when installing the pool. Each power outage was of relatively short duration and we got by just fine with it. I don't look down my nose at gasoline powered generators. I don't know if a gasoline-powered generator is available in the size we have that would be adequate to run one of our furnace/heat pumps, the well pump, and some appliances and lights. The well pump and heat pump require a substantial generator to start up and run. In the winter, if you don't have some heat available, the water pipes in the walls can freeze. Fixing that would cost a lot more than a generator. Oh, it's a 500-gallon buried tank. We did have one four-to-five day power outage in which the genny served us well. Do you honestly think you need all that when there's a power outage? Most of us could live with a couple space heaters, refrigerator, and some lights. Worried about water in pipes? Drain 'em. Buy some bottled water. Fill the bathtubs for the toilet. You're a mess. If you just have to have running water, leave the faucet trickling. I doesn't get into the negative numbers around here very much, especially in racist southern MD where you live. In an insulated house up my way it takes far more than a day or two of temps near zero or below to start being concerned with frozen pipes. Don't think it gets that cold in Harry's neck of the woods. How long does it take? Do you know? We've had winters in which the temps were in the single digits for a few days and only up in the teens later in that week. Would that be enough to freeze the pipes in an unheated house? |
#47
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posted to rec.boats
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On 9/14/18 5:25 PM, justan wrote:
John H. Wrote in message: On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 16:45:15 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 4:29 PM, Tim wrote: John H On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:27:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 2:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 12:14 PM, wrote: - show quoted text - That is the good thing about propane. It doesn't go bad. The problem is it may be hard to come by and very expensive after a storm. My generator will run both. I forgot that Harry looks down at little, gasoline powered generators because *he* has a big, whole house generator, supplied by a 1,000 gal propane underground tank. It starts once a week, runs for 10 minutes and shuts off, similar to my neighbor's generator whole house generator he installed three years ago. My neighbor is actually hoping for a longer term power outage just so he can justify the investment he made. I've used my generator twice since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, not counting the summer the stone cutters used it everyday when installing the pool. Each power outage was of relatively short duration and we got by just fine with it. I don't look down my nose at gasoline powered generators. I don't know if a gasoline-powered generator is available in the size we have that would be adequate to run one of our furnace/heat pumps, the well pump, and some appliances and lights. The well pump and heat pump require a substantial generator to start up and run. In the winter, if you don't have some heat available, the water pipes in the walls can freeze. Fixing that would cost a lot more than a generator. Oh, it's a 500-gallon buried tank. We did have one four-to-five day power outage in which the genny served us well. Do you honestly think you need all that when there's a power outage? Most of us could live with a couple space heaters, refrigerator, and some lights. Worried about water in pipes? Drain 'em. Buy some bottled water. Fill the bathtubs for the toilet. You're a mess. If you just have to have running water, leave the faucet trickling. I doesn't get into the negative numbers around here very much, especially in racist southern MD where you live. ........ John, some people don’t have a survivalists sense. Bad when their total life is dependent on others taking care of them.... Why should I want to be a right-wing survivalist when our generator keeps us comfortable, winter or summer, if there is a power outage? Doesn't your idiot buddy Johnny**** carry or use a generator in his motel room on wheels? Can't he put his dog or wife on a treadmill to generate whatever electricity he needs, and can't he poop in the woods? Leaving the water trickling isn't much of a solution when the water in the pipes comes from a well that has a 220 volt pump motor 225 feet underground. When we build our next house, we'll have a propane-fueled permanent generator there, too. If you had balls, you'd ask me yourself! Didn't mean to **** you off so badly. :) Yes you did. :-) The only thing Herring can **** on is his own trousers. |
#48
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posted to rec.boats
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Keyser Soze
- hide quoted text - On 9/14/18 5:25 PM, justan wrote:Â* John H. Wrote in message:Â* On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 16:45:15 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:Â* Â* On 9/14/18 4:29 PM, Tim wrote:Â* John HÂ* On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:27:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:Â* Â* On 9/14/18 2:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:Â* On 9/14/2018 12:14 Â*wrote:Â* - show quoted text -Â* That is the good thing about propane. It doesn't go bad. The problemÂ* is it may be hard to come by and very expensive after a storm. MyÂ* generator will run both.Â* Â* Â* Â* I forgot that Harry looks down at little, gasoline powered generatorsÂ* because *he* has a big, whole house generator, supplied by a 1,000 galÂ* propane underground tank. Â*It starts once a week, runs for 10 minutesÂ* and shuts off, similar to my neighbor's generator whole house generatorÂ* he installed three years ago. My neighbor is actually hoping for aÂ* longer term power outage just so he can justify the investment he made.Â* Â* I've used my generator twice since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, not countingÂ* the summer the stone cutters used it everyday when installing the pool.Â* Each power outage was of relatively short duration and we got by justÂ* fine with it.Â* Â* I don't look down my nose at gasoline powered generators. I don't knowÂ* if a gasoline-powered generator is available in the size we have thatÂ* would be adequate to run one of our furnace/heat pumps, the well pump,Â* and some appliances and lights. The well pump and heat pump require aÂ* substantial generator to start up and run. In the winter, if you don'tÂ* have some heat available, the water pipes in the walls can freeze.Â* Fixing that would cost a lot more than a generator.Â* Â* Oh, it's a 500-gallon buried tank. We did have one four-to-five dayÂ* power outage in which the genny served us well.Â* Â* Do you honestly think you need all that when there's a power outage? Most of us could live with aÂ* couple space heaters, refrigerator, and some lights.Â* Â* Worried about water in pipes? Drain 'em. Buy some bottled water. Fill the bathtubs for the toilet.Â* You're a mess. If you just have to have running water, leave the faucet trickling. I doesn't getÂ* into the negative numbers around here very much, especially in racist southern MD where you live.Â* Â* ........Â* Â* Â* John, some people don’t have a survivalists sense. Bad when their total life is dependent on others taking care of them....Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Why should I want to be a right-wing survivalist when our generatorÂ* keeps us comfortable, winter or summer, if there is a power outage?Â* Doesn't your idiot buddy Johnny**** carry or use a generator in hisÂ* motel room on wheels? Can't he put his dog or wife on a treadmill toÂ* generate whatever electricity he needs, and can't he poop in the woods?Â* Â* Leaving the water trickling isn't much of a solution when the water inÂ* the pipes comes from a well that has a 220 volt pump motor 225 feetÂ* underground.Â* Â* When we build our next house, we'll have a propane-fueled permanentÂ* generator there, too.Â* Â* If you had balls, you'd ask me yourself!Â* Â* Didn't mean to **** you off so badly. :)Â* Â* Â* Yes you did. :-)Â* Â* "The only thing Herring can **** on is his own trousers." Hee hee! I agree wholeheartedly and unequivocally with this post! |
#49
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posted to rec.boats
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On 9/14/2018 7:15 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/14/18 6:03 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 4:22 PM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 14:27:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/14/18 2:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 9/14/2018 12:14 PM, wrote: On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 11:28:55 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 9/14/2018 10:50 AM, Its Me wrote: On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:47:42 AM UTC-4, John H wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 21:34:54 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote: Well, after we had to evacuate the house for nearly a week while new hardwoods were being laid, sanded and finished,we are back in the house today just in time for Florence. At this time the biggest worry is power outage... the storm is down to a Cat 1, but is moving so slowly it will dump lots of rain.Â* We're on a hill so no worries of flooding, but power is a concern with a well. Should have pulled the trigger on a gen, but we've briefly lost power twice in ten years, so it hasn't been at the top of the list. Work is 10 minutes away, and we have a huge gen, kitchen and showers so really no big deal.Â* Plus I have about 5 ways to cook without electricity, so we are OK. Hope anyone in the path fairs well.Â* I'll probably just spend my time painting the newly remodeled parts.Â* All new appliances next Tuesday!Â* Then we'll have a complete kitchen again after almost 3 months.Â* Whew! I've heard nothing but good about this generator from the RV crowd. https://www.harborfreight.com/3500-w...tor-63584.html As soon as I find a buyer for my Honda 2200, I'm getting the Predator. Thanks, but I need 240V@30A to run the well pump. I don't necessarily need 240v (split phase) but if my Honda ever gives up the ghost I'll shop for one. Speaking of the Honda ... I just pulled it out of the storage shed and gave it three pulls.Â* Fired right up.Â* Last time it was used was last winter when we lost power for a couple of days.Â* Still has the same gas in it that it had then with a splash of Stabil in it.Â* I have it running right now, trying to run it out of gas so I can use fresh gas if and when I need it again.Â* It's just purring away on the old gas. So much for the stories that gas goes bad in a month or two.Â* It may lose some of it's BTU's so an engine can't develop it's full HP rating but I see no evidence of that.Â* I put a 1500 watt space heater on it as a load so it burns the gas faster and it runs just fine. That is the good thing about propane. It doesn't go bad. The problem is it may be hard to come by and very expensive after a storm. My generator will run both. I forgot that Harry looks down at little, gasoline powered generators because *he* has a big, whole house generator, supplied by a 1,000 gal propane underground tank.Â* It starts once a week, runs for 10 minutes and shuts off, similar to my neighbor's generator whole house generator he installed three years ago. My neighbor is actually hoping for a longer term power outage just so he can justify the investment he made. I've used my generator twice since Hurricane Wilma in 2005, not counting the summer the stone cutters used it everyday when installing the pool. Each power outage was of relatively short duration and we got by just fine with it. I don't look down my nose at gasoline powered generators. I don't know if a gasoline-powered generator is available in the size we have that would be adequate to run one of our furnace/heat pumps, the well pump, and some appliances and lights. The well pump and heat pump require a substantial generator to start up and run. In the winter, if you don't have some heat available, the water pipes in the walls can freeze. Fixing that would cost a lot more than a generator. Oh, it's a 500-gallon buried tank. We did have one four-to-five day power outage in which the genny served us well. Do you honestly think you need all that when there's a power outage? Most of us could live with a couple space heaters, refrigerator, and some lights. Worried about water in pipes? Drain 'em. Buy some bottled water. Fill the bathtubs for the toilet. You're a mess. If you just have to have running water, leave the faucet trickling. I doesn't get into the negative numbers around here very much, especially in racist southern MD where you live. In an insulated house up my way it takes far more than a day or two of temps near zero or below to start being concerned with frozen pipes. Don't think it gets that cold in Harry's neck of the woods. How long does it take? Do you know? We've had winters in which the temps were in the single digits for a few days and only up in the teens later in that week. Would that be enough to freeze the pipes in an unheated house? I stated that it takes far more than a day or two of temps near zero or below. How do I know? Because I've experienced it. Insulation is nothing more than a time delay for heat loss. However, that time delay can be quite lengthy for a well insulated house. The delay is also a factor of the delta T of the ambient temperature outside and the temperature inside the house and how often water flows through the pipes. During the last 2 day outage we experienced in our former house the outside temps during the day didn't rise above 12 degrees (F) and nights were below zero. After two days the house temp was still at 62 degrees inside. That's when I decided to hook the generator up to the heating system. Fortunately, power was restored a few hours later. If your house is poorly insulated or (worse yet) water pipes in outside walls were not installed properly, (meaning ending up between the insulation and the outside walls) you may have problems faster. Only time I've experienced frozen (and burst) water pipes was in Mrs.E's unheated horse barn where there was no insulation at all, the water pipes were exposed and I forgot to plug in the heat tape/rope on them. |
#50
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On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:02:12 PM UTC-4, True North wrote:
John H On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 07:50:06 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote:Â* On Friday, September 14, 2018 at 7:47:42 AM UTC-4, John H wrote:Â* On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 21:34:54 -0700 (PDT), Its Me wrote:Â* Â* Well, after we had to evacuate the house for nearly a week while new hardwoods were being laid, sanded and finished,we are back in the house today just in time for Florence. At this time the biggest worry is power outage... the storm is down to a Cat 1, but is moving so slowly it will dump lots of rain. Â*We're on a hill so no worries of flooding, but power is a concern with a well. Should have pulled the trigger on a gen, but we've briefly lost power twice in ten years, so it hasn't been at the top of the list. Work is 10 minutes away, and we have a huge gen, kitchen and showers so really no big deal. Â*Plus I have about 5 ways to cook without electricity, so we are OK.Â* Â* Hope anyone in the path fairs well. Â*I'll probably just spend my time painting the newly remodeled parts. Â*All new appliances next Tuesday! Â*Then we'll have a complete kitchen again after almost 3 months. Â*Whew!Â* Â* I've heard nothing but good about this generator from the RV crowd.Â* Â* Â*https://www.harborfreight.com/3500-w...r-63584.htmlÂ* Â* As soon as I find a buyer for my Honda 2200, I'm getting the Predator.Â* Â* Thanks, but I need 240V@30A to run the well pump.Â* "Sold the Honda today. But, Harbor Freight is out of the generator I want.. Actually, they're out ofÂ* all generators. Hope we don't lose power for too long. I think our longest outage, in 27 years withÂ* this company, has been for about four hours."Â* Duh! Considering we're in the middle of hurricane season, it might gave been prudent to get the new generator and test drive it before selling the Honda. Duh! Didn't you understand this? "I think our longest outage, in 27 years withÂ*this company, has been for about four hours." You are such a whiny bitch. And BTW, he uses it for camping, not for backup for his CPAP like harriet. ![]() |
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