Does your furnace use a standard wall plug so you can manually switch plug from grid to generator power? It appears all you other emergency loads are powered by cords form the generator.abscate wrote: ↑22 Sep 2023, 03:54Wire on poles in our area. No damage from Lee, it skipped to the east of us, no rain eithervolvolugnut wrote: ↑20 Sep 2023, 12:37Do you have underground electric power or wires on poles? What size generator will you use?abscate wrote: ↑19 Sep 2023, 19:01 Pulled all the wire to build in a secondary circuit for power outages.
I’m powering furnace, freezer, refrigerator , and a single outlet ground floor that can be isolated from the main , the powered by a generator in case of outage more than a day.
We live deep in beautiful oak trees, so wind is our disaster in the fall and winter.
Did you have any damage from latest hurricane?
volvolugnut
We run a 2kW Honda which will run at half capacity for our reduced storm needs. It uses 1 gallon gas for about 9 hours, we keep 7 gallons in reserve plus we can tap the fleet for more if needed. We turn it off for overnight and put block ice in the fridge
We have heard you can have outages of 2-3 days here, worst case
I am seriously considering how best to arrange for emergency power for our house. The major load will be 220 V hard wired at breaker box for the heat pump and auxiliary resistance heating.
There are several large scale battery backup systems (Generac, Tesla, and Panasonic are some brands) available. They can be charged by the grid, solar, or fueled generator. In my case with the heat and AC load, I would want a grid to backup switching box. This could be manual or automatic switching.
On further study, it appears you may be using a transfer switch for selective connection of your generator to some household circuits. Transfer switches can be manual or automatic and isolate the grid from generator power.
volvolugnut






