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What Standby Generator Do You Like

Mr. Wrench

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2025
Messages
396
Location
Ohio
Occupation
Mechanic
Was wondering what generators you guys like to use. I'm thinking in the 6000W range or bigger and Diesel. I want something simple, reliable, and good on fuel. I have heard some people say the best generator to get is two. I think I agree with that with all the import junk any more. I am getting ready to put a light tower into service as a generator to see how that will do. It has a 6000w pancake generator on it powered by a Mitsubishi L3E engine. Is that a good setup, good on fuel, start good in the cold? The pancake generators seem to be very common in light towers. What to stay with a 1800RPM unit, it will run quite a bit.
 

Simon C

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 1, 2015
Messages
3,099
Location
Rocky Mountain House , AB., Canada
Occupation
Heavy Equipment Mechanic
Was wondering what generators you guys like to use. I'm thinking in the 6000W range or bigger and Diesel. I want something simple, reliable, and good on fuel. I have heard some people say the best generator to get is two. I think I agree with that with all the import junk any more. I am getting ready to put a light tower into service as a generator to see how that will do. It has a 6000w pancake generator on it powered by a Mitsubishi L3E engine. Is that a good setup, good on fuel, start good in the cold? The pancake generators seem to be very common in light towers. What to stay with a 1800RPM unit, it will run quite a bit.
Have worked on a lot of Kubota powered ones that were 6-8 KW and are long life units. Cheap on fuel and seen some with 20- 35000 hours. Of course they all need oil changes and valves set regularly. Frontier Power in Alberta has sold 10's of thousands to the oil patch.
Simon C
 

Coaldust

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May 9, 2011
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Subarctic Backwoods Trailer Park
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Big trucks is what I know. HAZMAT is what I tow.
Yeah. Kubota is the de facto GOAT of small generators. It’s what you put on a mountain top radio repeater for six months and return the next spring to fuel it and adjust the valves, change the oil. Engineering marvel.

Amazing how a manufacturer can make a product like that, when their customer demands it.
 

Tyler d4c

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2016
Messages
2,663
Location
Salix Pa
These pop up on govplanet can be had for 1200 or so of course you have to (I do anyways) convert to 12 volt and get rid of the government circuit protection and add a breaker. They are 10kw will do 50 amps out put is 240/120. Engines are turboed d722 kubotas.
20260115_183131.jpg
 

Mr. Wrench

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2025
Messages
396
Location
Ohio
Occupation
Mechanic
Yeah. Kubota is the de facto GOAT of small generators. It’s what you put on a mountain top radio repeater for six months and return the next spring to fuel it and adjust the valves, change the oil. Engineering marvel.

Amazing how a manufacturer can make a product like that, when their customer demands it.
What model of engine are they? Also what kind of generator head?
 

Coaldust

Senior Member
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May 9, 2011
Messages
6,083
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Subarctic Backwoods Trailer Park
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Big trucks is what I know. HAZMAT is what I tow.
There is a smaller niche company called Alaska Diesel Electric that produces super high quality marine and land-based generator sets under the Northern Lights brand.

I worked for a dealer, back in the old days.
They are the generator you want for your apocalypse bunker or third world adventures.

Instead of using intigrated circuit boards and proprietary parts, they use Bosch relays, switches and wire. Easy to fix and find parts for. They are a joy to work on. Great wire diagrams, parts books and service manuals.
 

Tyler d4c

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2016
Messages
2,663
Location
Salix Pa
There is a smaller niche company called Alaska Diesel Electric that produces super high quality marine and land-based generator sets under the Northern Lights brand.

I worked for a dealer, back in the old days.
They are the generator you want for your apocalypse bunker or third world adventures.

Instead of using intigrated circuit boards and proprietary parts, they use Bosch relays, switches and wire. Easy to fix and find parts for. They are a joy to work on. Great wire diagrams, parts books and service manuals.
I also have a northern lights 8kw i got govplanet with 17 hrs on it. I should sell it but for what i got in it i stand to make too much money on it
 

Willie B

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
5,004
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
We sell Generac. Make a distinction between standby & manual. Most people here have portable generators we haul out to power our homes in a utility outage.
Tractor owners like PTO driven three point hitch machines. These work best if you have indoor storage where you can back up to hitch up.
Some want standby machines fully automatic. Those we sell most often are 14 killowatt air cooled, 3600 RPM twin cylinders. I can't remember an engine failure from normal wear.
We have seen engine fails because screws loosen up somewhere. One; a screw that holds plastic shroud in place 1/2" long screw fell out, rattled around inside the hollow flywheel till it punched a hole in the crankcase. It was extended warranty work, cost the owner nothing. He works for LOCKTITE. He remarked $0.01 in Locktite would have prevented an engine fail.
Another; machine installed by a non servicing dealer, screws holding a magneto coil loosened up, flywheel hit the coil. Ruined flywheel, both coils, caused it to backfire, blew up the muffler. We repaired it under warranty. Homeowner called Generac a year later, claimed it never did run again. Dead of winter, installer chose the lowest point on the property to install the generator. It was glass ice, with 4" of fluffy snow on top, bitter cold & windy. We could barely stand up. Found the same screws that loosened before had worked loose despite Locktite. I declared the threaded holes in the engine to be wallowed out enough to prevent a secure screw hold. wasn't enough metal there to use a helicoil, new engine.
 

masterwelder

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 28, 2010
Messages
280
Location
NY
I use my Miller Trailblazer Airpack. I think it's 12.5k/ 50A. Keeps things going no problem.
I do want a PTO unit though. Mainly to have a low speed diesel set up. I have my off road 300 gallon tank here and I would run it with my Kubota L6060. I could make it for quite awhile with that combo.
 

crane operator

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2009
Messages
10,220
Location
sw missouri
I have a generator I picked up from a cell site a couple years back. It a ford 300 on propane. I've planned on putting it at home, my wife is going to howl about its beautiful lime green color. I've also thought about just leaving it at my shop, I've got propane there, and don't have any propane at home.

I'll probably not do anything about it until we have a bad ice storm and I'll be totally unprepared.
 

Willie B

Senior Member
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Jan 2, 2016
Messages
5,004
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
^^^ and you still sell Generac after these problems ?
Two freak failures among hundreds? They were repaired under warranty.
I do believe Covid caused generator sales to soar. Generac doubled production, was forced to hire a lot of new people. I think quality control suffered for a time.
 

Tyler d4c

Senior Member
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Mar 2, 2016
Messages
2,663
Location
Salix Pa
Two freak failures among hundreds? They were repaired under warranty.
I do believe Covid caused generator sales to soar. Generac doubled production, was forced to hire a lot of new people. I think quality control suffered for a time.
At work we have a Generac model 55 it had problems from the word go it was new in october of 2019. We couldnt drag it to one site and use it for a day with out it not working. Any how they didnt have much interest in fixing it. Fast forward to con ex 2020 Im walking though and come across the generac booth and strike up a "conversation" till i was done causing a disruption amongst the people thet pasted me a card for a person in corprate or where ever after 1 call to them the dealer fixed it and it got parked in the corner for a spare and we bought a Cat to replace it. As far as im concered generac can keep there junk. This is a very heavy case of the dealer makes the product perhaps the home owner stuff is good I have no first have experiance.
 

Willie B

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
5,004
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
At work we have a Generac model 55 it had problems from the word go it was new in october of 2019. We couldnt drag it to one site and use it for a day with out it not working. Any how they didnt have much interest in fixing it. Fast forward to con ex 2020 Im walking though and come across the generac booth and strike up a "conversation" till i was done causing a disruption amongst the people thet pasted me a card for a person in corprate or where ever after 1 call to them the dealer fixed it and it got parked in the corner for a spare and we bought a Cat to replace it. As far as im concered generac can keep there junk. This is a very heavy case of the dealer makes the product perhaps the home owner stuff is good I have no first have experiance.
Many years ago, decades before I was a dealer, I was an electrician. Farmer had a PTO Generac in a dog house bolted to a concrete block. I'll say poor planning, there wasn't room for a human to work on it. Had a failure in a circuit board component of the voltage regulator. Generac said NLA (no longer available). Generator was a few years old at the time! After months of failing to source the bits on the board that had failed I was frustrated. Called Generac one last time, demanded to speak to tech support. The tech said: "Hell no, we haven't used those boards in a while. We change them out to solid state regulators. The boards were not tolerating moisture. He sent a solid state regulator, wiring harness, and instructions to convert.
A generator is as dependable as the service technician. Without good tech support, you'll be in trouble.
 

DDoug

Formerly digger doug
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Nov 2, 2011
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NW Pennsylvania
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Thrash-A-Matic designer
Many years ago, decades before I was a dealer, I was an electrician. Farmer had a PTO Generac in a dog house bolted to a concrete block. I'll say poor planning, there wasn't room for a human to work on it. Had a failure in a circuit board component of the voltage regulator. Generac said NLA (no longer available). Generator was a few years old at the time! After months of failing to source the bits on the board that had failed I was frustrated. Called Generac one last time, demanded to speak to tech support. The tech said: "Hell no, we haven't used those boards in a while. We change them out to solid state regulators. The boards were not tolerating moisture. He sent a solid state regulator, wiring harness, and instructions to convert.
A generator is as dependable as the service technician. Without good tech support, you'll be in trouble.
This ^^^ sounds like a very bad OEM, as soon as your request went in for the VR and you were told NLA, you should have "At that Time" been
told of the retrofit kit.

Another reason why I won't look at Generac for anything.
 

DDoug

Formerly digger doug
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Nov 2, 2011
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NW Pennsylvania
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Two freak failures among hundreds? They were repaired under warranty.
I do believe Covid caused generator sales to soar. Generac doubled production, was forced to hire a lot of new people. I think quality control suffered for a time.
Nowhere in post #10 did you indicate qty (2) sir.
 

Willie B

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
5,004
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
This ^^^ sounds like a very bad OEM, as soon as your request went in for the VR and you were told NLA, you should have "At that Time" been
told of the retrofit kit.

Another reason why I won't look at Generac for anything.
Like my Presidential vote, I'm not in love with either or any choice. I choose the lesser of the evils. These days Generac has good technical support. I can't live without that.
I believe no manufacturer offers a trouble free forever generator. All the major brands sell a functional machine until it isn't. I've had discouraging experiences with Briggs, and Kohler, I feel 10 years ago Briggs didn't measure up with engines, placement of engines above the generator where any leaks, or even spills ended up in the generator. Having to remove bolts & ill fitting sheet metal parts to check the oil stinks. Others are more expensive, and could give problems also.
 
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