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What Standby Generator Do You Like

Coaldust

Senior Member
Joined
May 9, 2011
Messages
6,081
Location
Subarctic Backwoods Trailer Park
Occupation
Big trucks is what I know. HAZMAT is what I tow.
I don’t have a horse in this race, but I’ll say Generac is a master at marketing and homeowners around the MatSu are purchasing them like crazy.

Fred buys one. He is the only house with lights when the power goes out, then his neighbors all get one. Landlords are installing them on rentals, too because it’s less expensive than dealing with a frozen house.
 

Simon C

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 1, 2015
Messages
3,099
Location
Rocky Mountain House , AB., Canada
Occupation
Heavy Equipment Mechanic
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.
Well spoken. Work the best with what is available.
Simon C
 

Willie B

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2016
Messages
5,004
Location
Mount Tabor VT
Occupation
Electrician
I'm a local small scale dealer. In my radius 50 retailers sell Generac generators. My son felt it worthwhile to be a "servicing dealer". Before Covid, he had to go out of state three days for training. That is expensive!!
Since 100% of trouble calls are weekend, 90% are night, he doesn't work weekends, none are our customers, I lean to discontinuing the servicing dealer status.
 

Simon C

Senior Member
Joined
Jul 1, 2015
Messages
3,099
Location
Rocky Mountain House , AB., Canada
Occupation
Heavy Equipment Mechanic
I'm a local small scale dealer. In my radius 50 retailers sell Generac generators. My son felt it worthwhile to be a "servicing dealer". Before Covid, he had to go out of state three days for training. That is expensive!!
Since 100% of trouble calls are weekend, 90% are night, he doesn't work weekends, none are our customers, I lean to discontinuing the servicing dealer status.
Understand the dilema. People don't do their monthly checks and the power goes out on Saturday night at 12:30 and you should be there in 20 minutes, and your not going to charge me are you. Nice try their is a full mouse house in your unit and 3000 pine cones from a squirrel, when did you check it last.LOL
Simon C
 

reganj

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 1, 2024
Messages
352
Location
Central Ms
Do not laugh or make fun of me, Or laugh and make fun of me.
I used my Harbor Freight 2k inverter/generator for 06 days running my Fridge, TV and Dish box, a fan to circulate the heat, and a LED light.
I am guessing I burned less than 07 gallons of gasoline, a full tank ran over 13 hours.
Your results may vary
 

Mr. Wrench

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2025
Messages
396
Location
Ohio
Occupation
Mechanic
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.
View attachment 355167
What would those be used for that I would search them as. Also what kind of generator head? Would it be hard to get parts for the generator part?
 

Tyler d4c

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2016
Messages
2,663
Location
Salix Pa
What would those be used for that I would search them as. Also what kind of generator head? Would it be hard to get parts for the generator part?
Screenshot_20260202_123907_Drive.jpg
They are normally listed as auxilary power. Parts for the engines i always justs cross them to a kubota tractor if you where to end up with one i can email you the manuals
 

Mr. Wrench

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2025
Messages
396
Location
Ohio
Occupation
Mechanic
I like the look of those Northern Lights generators. They look like they are built rugged and simple like what I want. Don't need auto start or anything fancy. The simpler the better.

The Generac inverter generator that I have seems to be alittle better than Harbor Freight. It gets in these moods where it doesn't want to run right and just messes around. About ready to throw it in the trash several times. The best inverter I've had was a Yamaha. Keep fuel to it and it would just sit and do nothing wrong all day. It was rated lower than the generac but it could pull more load. Yamaha quit making generators though.

I've been looking at these light towers for awhile and they look like they could be an economical generator to get. Most are powered by a Kubota, Perkins, or Mitsubishi. All those would be good engines. It seems like 3/4 of them have the pancake generator head by Marathon. Is that a good generator head? You could just look around until you found the engine you wanted. I think they are brushless. Is that better than one with brushes?
 

MarshallPowerGen

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 26, 2017
Messages
658
Location
NW USA
Occupation
Generator Technician & Equipment Mechanic
I wonder if a misprint, I rarely see a diesel wants to run 3600 RPM. 1800 RPM is more diesel speed.
Generator at home is a 3600 7kW 2cyl Kubota powered MQ. Wouldn't have been my first choice, but picked it up for free out of the back of the yard at an old employer and put a new stator in it.

Had no complaints after running the whole house during a 3 day outage. Ate about 5 gallons every 24 hours.
 

DDoug

Formerly digger doug
Joined
Nov 2, 2011
Messages
2,738
Location
NW Pennsylvania
Occupation
Thrash-A-Matic designer
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.
It's not so much about the sheetmetal, rather the obsoleting the VR board, and then not telling you a new retrofit kit is available until you inquired
how many times ?

In our business, it's called a "supercedure" and the notice goes out on the old part "DO NOT USE, USE XXX INSTEAD".

I like the professional gensets, inline engines, robust electronics (minimal as well).
 

pdeal

Active Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2025
Messages
40
Location
West Virginia
I've had quite a few over the years. Early on I had a PTO generator. This worked well but I didn't like my tractor running full tilt unattended for many hours at a time. Tractors are not designed to run unattended and if something goes wrong it would most likely ruin a very expensive tractor.

I had a light plant. This had a Marathon pancake generator and a kubota D905 engine. Good engine, bad generator. These generators are designed for running lights and not much else. They are not regulated. I connected mine for 240v with neutral. If you loaded one 120v circuit it would go down and the other would go up. I reconnected for just 120v and it was ok for this. Wound up selling this. I actually called Marathon tech support at one point and the guy said these generators are just minimal and not very good for any type application other than lights.

I have a Miller diesel welder that was one of the worst things I ever bought. The thing about welders, especially Miller, they are trying to get the most HP out of a small engine. They generally have 2 pole generators and so run at 3600rpm. Mine was a mouse house and ruined inside because if it. I decided to rip all the electrics out of it and bought a generator head from Central Georgia Generator. Quite a looser of a project but sort of fun. This made about the best 6-7kw generator a person can find. Very nice package now, just a generator not a welder anymore.

In 2008 I bought a 25kva Wacker tow behind generator. This was a smoking deal at the time with 1500 hours or so. Wonderful machine! Runs for days on a tank of fuel, runs the whole house, very quiet. This has a 4 cyl isuzu engine. Since about 2015 or so these are ruined in my opinion since they are all common rail engines and probably not practical to maintain for an individual.

I just bought a Kohler 30kw standby generator. It's an ugly duck with the housing rust but it's only got 250hrs on it and has a Deere 4 cylinder naturally aspirated engine. Looks pretty promising. It starts right up, and has a big tank. Lots of these type takeout generators around with very low hours. Less desirable for lots of people since they are not portable.

If you can find a light plant with a good engine but otherwise clapped out I think buying one of the generator heads from central georgia generator and installing makes a nice setup.

Below is a picture of my frankenstein Miller generator. I installed two chicom digital voltage/current/frequency meters on it. It has a Kubota D1005 engine, Central Georgia Gen 8kw 1ph Gen Head. I put expanded metal over all the big holes to keep the varmints out this time. Seems like Miller could figure this out. I did quite a bit of testing when I finished this one and it regulates well and it'll do up to about 7kw. I know many people will say that's not much power at all but this thing really runs nice. It's got 2500 hours on the engine and will probably run for many thousand more if maintained. Not so for a gas generator.


IMG_6314.JPG
 
Last edited:

Mr. Wrench

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 23, 2025
Messages
396
Location
Ohio
Occupation
Mechanic
I've had quite a few over the years. Early on I had a PTO generator. This worked well but I didn't like my tractor running full tilt unattended for many hours at a time. Tractors are not designed to run unattended and if something goes wrong it would most likely ruin a very expensive tractor.

I had a light plant. This had a Marathon pancake generator and a kubota D905 engine. Good engine, bad generator. These generators are designed for running lights and not much else. They are not regulated. I connected mine for 240v with neutral. If you loaded one 120v circuit it would go down and the other would go up. I reconnected for just 120v and it was ok for this. Wound up selling this. I actually called Marathon tech support at one point and the guy said these generators are just minimal and not very good for any type application other than lights.

I have a Miller diesel welder that was one of the worst things I ever bought. The thing about welders, especially Miller, they are trying to get the most HP out of a small engine. They generally have 2 pole generators and so run at 3600rpm. Mine was a mouse house and ruined inside because if it. I decided to rip all the electrics out of it and bought a generator head from Central Georgia Generator. Quite a looser of a project but sort of fun. This made about the best 6-7kw generator a person can find. Very nice package now, just a generator not a welder anymore.

In 2008 I bought a 25kva Wacker tow behind generator. This was a smoking deal at the time with 1500 hours or so. Wonderful machine! Runs for days on a tank of fuel, runs the whole house, very quiet. This has a 4 cyl isuzu engine. Since about 2015 or so these are ruined in my opinion since they are all common rail engines and probably not practical to maintain for an individual.

I just bought a Kohler 30kw standby generator. It's an ugly duck with the housing rust but it's only got 250hrs on it and has a Deere 4 cylinder naturally aspirated engine. Looks pretty promising. It starts right up, and has a big tank. Lots of these type takeout generators around with very low hours. Less desirable for lots of people since they are not portable.

If you can find a light plant with a good engine but otherwise clapped out I think buying one of the generator heads from central georgia generator and installing makes a nice setup.

Below is a picture of my frankenstein Miller generator. I installed two chicom digital voltage/current/frequency meters on it. It has a Kubota D1005 engine, Central Georgia Gen 8kw 1ph Gen Head. I put expanded metal over all the big holes to keep the varmints out this time. Seems like Miller could figure this out. I did quite a bit of testing when I finished this one and it regulates well and it'll do up to about 7kw. I know many people will say that's not much power at all but this thing really runs nice. It's got 2500 hours on the engine and will probably run for many thousand more if maintained. Not so for a gas generator.


View attachment 355515
That is good to know about the light towers. I thought that they would be a good deal, but it sounds like they are not made for heavy use. I'd be glad to hear anyone's experience with using light towers as generators. I just got mine going this week. It seems to work good so far. Just using it to power some lights and heater ect.

Do you think the generators from Central Georgia Generator are good quality? I have seen them but don't know what brand they are or where they are made.
 

skyking1

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2020
Messages
9,612
Location
washington
I've only run a few saws and compressors on my light plant. I will do some testing next time It runs. I load both sides of it when I use it.
 
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