@@juliosdiy3206 some advice through personal experience. Buy a generator on Amazon, spend the $50 or $75 on the extended warranty, and your generator is covered for 4 or 5 years. I bought a Pulsar 2300 generator for about $399, spent $75 on a 4 year warranty, and stick to a maintenance schedule where I run it for an hour or 2 each month. Installed an hour meter so I know to check oil every 8 hours of runtime, and to change the oil inside the recommended 100hr intervals. I sized the emergency needs of my house to keep lights on, fridge running, charge devices etc, and the 2300 Peak/1800W running size was perfect for what I needed. It’s not as fancy as a $1200 Honda generator, but it will run fine if you stick to maintenance, and will be covered if you have the warranty. If emergency heat is an issue, look into getting a kerosene heater and stocking up on a couple 5gal jugs of kerosene. Texas had a bad freeze in 2021, and I learned a lesson or two about being a bit more prepared for an emergency.
Propane contains more than twice the energy of natural gas. So until the manufacture or someone else creates a kit. It appears gas or propane is the only two options. I wish it was a 3 way myself.
Do you need to choke it when it's on propane?
No sir good point, After choking it on propane your probably better off without.
Does the hose come with it?
Yes
Dang man the sound is not loud!!!
will it run a window ac?
Possibly a small one
Dual fuel, unless the 2 different fuels are dueling against each other 🤷♂️
Awesome i was planning to buy the 3500.
@@juliosdiy3206 some advice through personal experience. Buy a generator on Amazon, spend the $50 or $75 on the extended warranty, and your generator is covered for 4 or 5 years. I bought a Pulsar 2300 generator for about $399, spent $75 on a 4 year warranty, and stick to a maintenance schedule where I run it for an hour or 2 each month. Installed an hour meter so I know to check oil every 8 hours of runtime, and to change the oil inside the recommended 100hr intervals. I sized the emergency needs of my house to keep lights on, fridge running, charge devices etc, and the 2300 Peak/1800W running size was perfect for what I needed. It’s not as fancy as a $1200 Honda generator, but it will run fine if you stick to maintenance, and will be covered if you have the warranty.
If emergency heat is an issue, look into getting a kerosene heater and stocking up on a couple 5gal jugs of kerosene. Texas had a bad freeze in 2021, and I learned a lesson or two about being a bit more prepared for an emergency.
Has anyone tried to adapt it to natural gas? I have unlimited natural gas at home but only 2 tanks of propane.
Propane contains more than twice the energy of natural gas. So until the manufacture or someone else creates a kit. It appears gas or propane is the only two options. I wish it was a 3 way myself.