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Portable Generator for Camper
On Jan 10, 9:15*pm, personaobscura
wrote: On Mon, 10 Jan 2011 18:55:01 -0800 (PST), Giles wrote: On Jan 10, 3:33*pm, personaobscura wrote: On Sun, 9 Jan 2011 12:35:10 -0800 (PST), DaveS wrote: Suggestions and experience welcome. I need a smaller generator for use with my camper. The Camper is a lance 825, no AC. I presently cart in a couple of marine 12 volt batteries. With use confined to lights I am good for 4 nites on one fully charged battery. I want to be able to run the occasional power drill, recharge 12 volt bats, and some small appliances, like radio, dvd , maybe a small power saw, maybe a small ceramic heater. Brand and model Suggestions? How to Plug in to Camper panal? Noise? Did I read once that your property is on a river? If that's true, could you find a site - or pipe from your high point down to one - and develop enough head to run a generator? If I'm mis-remembering, my apologies. Hm..... Forgive the seeming impertenance but.....um.....does damming a trout stream for the convenience of using an electric latte frother REALLY seem like a good idea? * * *:( g. i mean, sucking the sun dry OUGHT TO be just about enough, ainna? Cripes, he wasn't planning on siting a smelter on the back 40, was he? He? Um.....just who is it you thought was asking about the possibility of installing a hydroelectric generator? It wouldn't take much to manage a tiny trailer. If he does have a stream that has a decent drop somewhere on his property he might be able to site a generator that can quietly run his latte frother, a couple of lights, and keep a set of batteries charged up, without altering the run of the river at all. Well, you couldn't possibly be more wrong. ANY diversion from ANY stream (yes, even the great rivers of the world, like the Amazon or the west fork of the Kickapoo) necessarily alters "the run of the river" even if ALL of the water is returned, which is almost never the case. To put it more simply, alterations change things. Sorta self- evident, ainna? Should be. But then, stupid happens. Leaving aside the obvious latter observation (for the nonce, anyway) what do you suppose happens when 100.....1,000.....1,000,000 people living along a stream decide to divert just a bit to charge up a couple of lights and keep a set of batteries charged up, without altering the run of the river at all? Your math says absolutely nothing happens. How about a hundred million?.....a billion? Hm.....let's see.....naught times naught is naught.....carry the naught.....um.....yep, tha'ts right jethro.....NOTHING happens. See what I mean? Stupid happens. g. |
Portable Generator for Camper
On Jan 10, 1:33*pm, personaobscura
wrote: On Sun, 9 Jan 2011 12:35:10 -0800 (PST), DaveS wrote: Suggestions and experience welcome. I need a smaller generator for use with my camper. The Camper is a lance 825, no AC. I presently cart in a couple of marine 12 volt batteries. With use confined to lights I am good for 4 nites on one fully charged battery. I want to be able to run the occasional power drill, recharge 12 volt bats, and some small appliances, like radio, dvd , maybe a small power saw, maybe a small ceramic heater. Brand and model Suggestions? How to Plug in to Camper panal? Noise? Did I read once that your property is on a river? If that's true, could you find a site - or pipe from your high point down to one - and develop enough head to run a generator? If I'm mis-remembering, my apologies. Fair question, In my natal NJ a great pleasure was crawling about old mills and water powered industrial-a-fluvial. Mill ponds and spillways are rare in the West compared to the rest of the USA. So I am not a black or white partisan on the riverine environmental affronted debate. So, yes my place is on a smaller trib river and the gradient is sufficient to do a small generator, HOWEVER, this is in a Western ag region where all the water is "spoken for" in water rights dating back to pioneer days. Consequently, any pipe even near the water had better have a metered right to be there. And then there is all that enviro stuff. ;+)) .. . . like, the river has a small run of Steelhead, ditto for a few of the salmons, cutts and a listed population of Dolly Varden Trout. (or is it Bull Trout?). To protect fry, each takeout pipe must have very expensive screens. The Native American Tribes, inland, on the Columbia, and on the coast all want the fish to get their share of the water. As do the legions of govt, the contractors, the loggers, the BPA, most of the farmers, etc etc ME, and the commercial fishers out on the Coast. Bottom-line . . . it's a non-starter no matter how trivial. Death from a thousand cuts theory? Major Wind is a big deal near my place. And there is a little solar including one setup w/ three big panel banks, in a tilled field, up about 10' on 3 pylons, and the damn things follow the sun. It looks like i could get a decent 160 watt panel and electronics for about $1000. |
Portable Generator for Camper
DaveS wrote:
On Jan 10, 1:33 pm, personaobscura wrote: On Sun, 9 Jan 2011 12:35:10 -0800 (PST), DaveS wrote: Suggestions and experience welcome. I need a smaller generator for use with my camper. The Camper is a lance 825, no AC. I presently cart in a couple of marine 12 volt batteries. With use confined to lights I am good for 4 nites on one fully charged battery. I want to be able to run the occasional power drill, recharge 12 volt bats, and some small appliances, like radio, dvd , maybe a small power saw, maybe a small ceramic heater. Brand and model Suggestions? How to Plug in to Camper panal? Noise? Did I read once that your property is on a river? If that's true, could you find a site - or pipe from your high point down to one - and develop enough head to run a generator? If I'm mis-remembering, my apologies. Fair question, In my natal NJ a great pleasure was crawling about old mills and water powered industrial-a-fluvial. Mill ponds and spillways are rare in the West compared to the rest of the USA. So I am not a black or white partisan on the riverine environmental affronted debate. So, yes my place is on a smaller trib river and the gradient is sufficient to do a small generator, HOWEVER, this is in a Western ag region where all the water is "spoken for" in water rights dating back to pioneer days. Consequently, any pipe even near the water had better have a metered right to be there. And then there is all that enviro stuff. ;+)) . . . like, the river has a small run of Steelhead, ditto for a few of the salmons, cutts and a listed population of Dolly Varden Trout. (or is it Bull Trout?). To protect fry, each takeout pipe must have very expensive screens. The Native American Tribes, inland, on the Columbia, and on the coast all want the fish to get their share of the water. As do the legions of govt, the contractors, the loggers, the BPA, most of the farmers, etc etc ME, and the commercial fishers out on the Coast. Bottom-line . . . it's a non-starter no matter how trivial. Death from a thousand cuts theory? Major Wind is a big deal near my place. And there is a little solar including one setup w/ three big panel banks, in a tilled field, up about 10' on 3 pylons, and the damn things follow the sun. It looks like i could get a decent 160 watt panel and electronics for about $1000. How about an undershot wheel hung in the river on a cantilever arm? Not real efficient but if you have enough flow they do work. -- Steve W. (\___/) (='.'=) (")_(") |
Portable Generator for Camper
On Jan 9, 9:08*pm, "Steve W." wrote:
For quiet you want either a Yamaha or Honda unit. They are about 20Db quieter than most of the rest. But you will pay a lot more. You can say that again. like 300% more. Ive read somewhere a rare critique of the Hondas' aluminum cylinder sleeves and various plastic parts, and how cast iron is better and metal is better than plastic for the alternator frame and casing. Any opinion? I am inordinately wary of Chi-Com stuff and find i have to look at every last thing to cut down on the returns and built in problems, and even stuff like whether threaded parts actually mesh with reasonable tolerances and w/out leaks. Ive paid lots for stuff that i have had to retrofit to make work, and wasted hours and days with crap that won't work or is broken before it is sealed in shipping plastic. The corruption of American big-box buyers and inspectors in China must be rampant. In any case it looks like for example the Chinese set the automatic screw machine once, and if it goes out of tolerance as the part run progresses, well, to hell with it, some old imperialist dog in Washington State will make it work somehow. ;+)) So I lean to stuff made here when i can find it, or from Taiwan, Italy, Germany or Japan. Dave Weird huh? But then I also will only eat shrimp from the US, Canada, Japan or Mexico. ;+)) |
Portable Generator for Camper
On Jan 11, 4:04*am, "Steve W." wrote:
DaveS wrote: On Jan 10, 1:33 pm, personaobscura wrote: On Sun, 9 Jan 2011 12:35:10 -0800 (PST), DaveS wrote: Suggestions and experience welcome. I need a smaller generator for use with my camper. The Camper is a lance 825, no AC. I presently cart in a couple of marine 12 volt batteries. With use confined to lights I am good for 4 nites on one fully charged battery. I want to be able to run the occasional power drill, recharge 12 volt bats, and some small appliances, like radio, dvd , maybe a small power saw, maybe a small ceramic heater. Brand and model Suggestions? How to Plug in to Camper panal? Noise? Did I read once that your property is on a river? If that's true, could you find a site - or pipe from your high point down to one - and develop enough head to run a generator? If I'm mis-remembering, my apologies. Fair question, In my natal NJ a great pleasure was crawling about old mills and water powered industrial-a-fluvial. Mill ponds and spillways are rare in the West compared to the rest of the USA. *So I am not a black or white partisan on the riverine environmental affronted debate. So, yes my place is on a smaller trib river and the gradient is sufficient to do a small generator, HOWEVER, this is in a Western ag region where all the water is "spoken for" in water rights dating back to pioneer days. *Consequently, any pipe even near the water had better have a metered right to be there. And then there is all that enviro stuff. ;+)) . . . like, * the river has a small run of Steelhead, ditto for a few of the salmons, cutts and a listed population of Dolly Varden Trout. (or is it Bull Trout?). To protect fry, each takeout pipe must have very expensive screens. The Native American Tribes, inland, on the Columbia, and on the coast all want the fish to get their share of the water. As do the legions of govt, the contractors, the loggers, the BPA, most of the farmers, etc etc ME, and the commercial fishers out on the Coast. Bottom-line . . . it's a non-starter no matter how trivial. Death from a thousand cuts theory? Major Wind is a big deal near my place. And there is a little solar including one setup w/ three big panel banks, in a tilled field, up about 10' on 3 pylons, and the damn things follow the sun. It looks like i could get a decent 160 watt panel and electronics for about $1000. How about an undershot wheel hung in the river on a cantilever arm? Not real efficient but if you have enough flow they do work. -- Steve W. (\___/) (='.'=) (")_(")- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - On the negative side that cantilever arm would take about 6 years to get the necessary permits. On the positive side the process of getting the permits etc would provide 6 yrs of well paid employment for at least a half dozen ArmChair Experts, govt and contractor variety. I am exaggerating, and I know you are joking, but the truth is I have a limited taste for "process" these days. I much prefer to work with enviro NGOs and neighbor farmers, although FSA is pretty easy to work with on the ag side of things. Virtually all the environmentally sound things ive done and the income to do them comes from advise and support of neighbor farmers, a local enviro group, a state water trust, and the FSA of the DO Ag. The mistakes have been mine. Dave |
Portable Generator for Camper
"jeff" wrote in message . .. On 1/9/2011 5:10 PM, DaveS wrote: On Jan 9, 1:29 pm, wrote: On Sun, 9 Jan 2011 13:22:24 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 9, 12:35 pm, wrote: Suggestions and experience welcome. I need a smaller generator for use with my camper. The Camper is a lance 825, no AC. I presently cart in a couple of marine 12 volt batteries. With use confined to lights I am good for 4 nites on one fully charged battery. I want to be able to run the occasional power drill, recharge 12 volt bats, and some small appliances, like radio, dvd , maybe a small power saw, maybe a small ceramic heater. Brand and model Suggestions? How to Plug in to Camper panal? Noise? Dave, There are lots of good small motor driven portable generators out there (Honda generators are well regarded), but they are all loud. If this is for your set up on the wheat farm, you may want to look at wind and/or solar solutions. You couldn't find a much better location for these power sources. There are getting to be lots of setups developed for smaller applications such as you are envisioning. Bob Weinberger Actually, the Honda gensets I've been around (only 3 so far) have been pretty quiet, when compared to other brands. I could actually stand within 5 or 6 feet and hold a conversation w/o having to raise my voice. There's another, a 4KW unit sold by Tractor Supply, that's quieter than the run-of-the-mill genset, but it's a bunch louder than the Honda.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Anybody have experience with the 2000 or 3000 portable Honda generators? Dave i have experience with a honda generator...just can't remember if it was danl's or asadi/john baker's. in each case, i went to sleep before either was cut off. quiet, relatively light weight. jeff I had the 3000.... and it got to big to lift - for my years ....I could create a civilization with the Honda 1000 and have plenty of cold beer....and so quiet you wonder if it is running... john |
Portable Generator for Camper
On Jan 9, 4:38*pm, jeff wrote:
On 1/9/2011 5:10 PM, DaveS wrote: On Jan 9, 1:29 pm, wrote: On Sun, 9 Jan 2011 13:22:24 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Jan 9, 12:35 pm, *wrote: Suggestions and experience welcome. I need a smaller generator for use with my camper. The Camper is a lance 825, no AC. I presently cart in a couple of marine 12 volt batteries. With use confined to lights I am good for 4 nites on one fully charged battery. I want to be able to run the occasional power drill, recharge 12 volt bats, and some small appliances, like radio, dvd , maybe a small power saw, maybe a small ceramic heater. Brand and model Suggestions? How to Plug in to Camper panal? Noise? Dave, There are lots of good small motor driven portable generators out there (Honda generators are well regarded), but they are all loud. If this is for your set up on the wheat farm, you may want to look at wind and/or solar solutions. *You couldn't find a much better location for these power sources. There are getting to be lots of setups developed for smaller applications such as you are envisioning. Bob Weinberger Actually, the Honda gensets I've been around (only 3 so far) have been pretty quiet, when compared to other brands. *I could actually stand within 5 or 6 feet and hold a conversation w/o having to raise my voice. There's another, a 4KW unit sold by Tractor Supply, that's quieter than the run-of-the-mill genset, but it's a bunch louder than the Honda.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Anybody have experience with the 2000 or 3000 portable Honda generators? Dave i have experience with a honda generator...just can't remember if it was danl's or asadi/john baker's. *in each case, i went to sleep before either was cut off. *quiet, relatively light weight. jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanx. It was Danl. He Emailed me with some useful advise on the Honda EU2000si Dave |
There are many good small motor-driven generators Honda portable generator has a correct view, but they are safe. If this is your game of the wheat farm, you can see the wind and / or solar energy solutions. You can not find a better place for these energy sources.
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