A question probably for the electricians amongst you.
I'm being encouraged by my better half to get an emergency generator for the house so that we can function during power cuts and maybe for a while if Mr Putin does his worst. We had a long Pcut last month whilst I was away and apart from the inconvenience it was on 24th February and she started to worry that it was due to Mr P, - via hacking rather than a direct hit on a power station I may add. However they have become a bit more frequent so I thought Id look into it.
Our requirements,
-Firstly as its only to be used once in a blue moon I was tempted to look for a cheap DIY one from a shed store.
- it needs to power our large fridge, two deep freezes, the Central heating and a few lights and phone chargers., whilst the total continuous power of all of this is quite low, only about 500W. The fridge freezer motors draw 8amps on start-up so thats about 1800w. so been looking at 2000w or 3000w to be safe side as a lot of reviews mention how they cut out on such things.
- it probably needs to be a sinewave inverter as the fridge motor will need that kind of waveform, not sure if a pure sinewave (more expensive) or an impure sinewave 96% (cheaper) will be ok.
- The other thing is reliability.
Some of the cheapest on screwfix, etc get mixed reviews due to thing failure on 3rd or 4th use, although lots of good reviews, so do I get a more expensive reliable one and fire it up every 3 months to keep it running in good order, Or do I buy a cheaper screwfix one, leave it in the box unused until the next blue moon when we can get it out and set it up then after use, drain the oil and fuel out and put it away?
I've seen one on Machine mart that might be OK, but never bought from them before - they look a bit of a cheap and cheerful place.
I'm being encouraged by my better half to get an emergency generator for the house so that we can function during power cuts and maybe for a while if Mr Putin does his worst. We had a long Pcut last month whilst I was away and apart from the inconvenience it was on 24th February and she started to worry that it was due to Mr P, - via hacking rather than a direct hit on a power station I may add. However they have become a bit more frequent so I thought Id look into it.
Our requirements,
-Firstly as its only to be used once in a blue moon I was tempted to look for a cheap DIY one from a shed store.
- it needs to power our large fridge, two deep freezes, the Central heating and a few lights and phone chargers., whilst the total continuous power of all of this is quite low, only about 500W. The fridge freezer motors draw 8amps on start-up so thats about 1800w. so been looking at 2000w or 3000w to be safe side as a lot of reviews mention how they cut out on such things.
- it probably needs to be a sinewave inverter as the fridge motor will need that kind of waveform, not sure if a pure sinewave (more expensive) or an impure sinewave 96% (cheaper) will be ok.
- The other thing is reliability.
Some of the cheapest on screwfix, etc get mixed reviews due to thing failure on 3rd or 4th use, although lots of good reviews, so do I get a more expensive reliable one and fire it up every 3 months to keep it running in good order, Or do I buy a cheaper screwfix one, leave it in the box unused until the next blue moon when we can get it out and set it up then after use, drain the oil and fuel out and put it away?
I've seen one on Machine mart that might be OK, but never bought from them before - they look a bit of a cheap and cheerful place.