Diamondpilot
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2007
- Messages
- 16,316
- Location
- Daleville, IN
- Tractor
- Jinma 254/284 Ford 861 Powermaster at work
Chris, I didn't remember who posted about running the gen overnight, and was to lazy to look back. Anyway, I enjoy talking about back up generators and like you said to each his own.
But as far as losing 20 degrees overnight, that would never happen in my house, never even happen in 24 hours at 15-20 degrees out.
Maybe an anomaly but true, and the house was built in 1936.
My thermostat is programmable and at 10 pm it drops to 62 and at 6am it goes up to 68. Maybe twice in the last 5 years has the boiler kicked on at like 5am cause the temp dropped those 6 degrees to 62, but that was with low single digits outside.
For me listening to the generator running all night would be more of an inconvenience than not having electricity at night.
Except for medical equipment or 100 degrees and humid I would definitely not be running a generator in the overnight hours.
/
That must be one heck of a house. I also have a programmable thermostat and mine does just as yours and drops to 62 at 10 pm and back up to 68 at 6 am. I would say right now my furnace is running once per hour for maybe 10 minutes. My house is very tight and can barley hear the genny when on the other side of the wall from it which is on the far south end of the home. My bedroom plus the kids bedrooms are on the far north side with only the guest room on the south side. I would say you could hear it in the guest room and office but would never hear it in the master or kids rooms.
My genny has a good muffler that is nearly the size of a shoe box and is chrome. Not sure about it but is much quieter than say a riding mower with with the same HP engine.
The genny pad is next to the chimney which is the south end. The bedrooms with the exception of the office and guest room are on the north end and all on the second level.
Chris