Larry Caldwell
Elite Member
I took a different approach than many. I installed a manual transfer switch, which was easy because the main panel is on the barn, and all the house power goes through a single 100A breaker. I also bought a PTO generator. Had to build a frame for it, but that was no problem. About every 5 years we have a 3 day outage, most others are only an hour or so. It takes a good 15 minutes to remove mower and install generator, usually in the rain, but it does the job and I always have fresh fuel and don't worry about an engine that has been sitting 12 months.
I just retired and finally have time to tinker, so I'm going to build up a PTO generator too. I won't need all the engine horsepower, so I'm going to gear it to run on 350 RPM, which should save quite a bit of fuel. I have a tachometer on the PTO, so setting the correct RPM shouldn't be a problem.
I also have an old 2.5" pump that I'm going to set up as a PTO pump. Judging from the number of belts on the sheave, it was originally about a 15 HP pump, and I assume 1800 RPM, though it might run slower. The impeller housing is almost a foot in diameter. I haven't been able to find any data on it on the web. I have seen similar pumps as boosters in high rise sprinkler systems, so think it will put out a lot of water at high pressure.
I have a little 1" 5 HP Honda pump for fire fighting when the power lines burn up, but there's a world of difference between a 1" line at 50 psi and a 2" line at 100 psi.