dodge man
Super Star Member
I don't use mine at a campground, if I did they would run me off.
I had occasion to service a 6000 watt Champion that was going to be scrapped.
It showed over 800 hours of very hard usage on a construction site and I needed to strip it down and pulled the head.
I could not believe what I saw inside that engine. It was in super nice condition and about as perfect as you would ever want a high usage engine to be. Cylinder, piston rings etc absolutely perfect.
Frankly I actually expected to find a disaster and was very surprised as I have opened many a small engine with way much less hours that were really trashed out.
I re-assembled, fired it up and it simply purrs.
As to sound levels, there you are on your own as I simply wanted to pass on my observations as to brand quality.
I once simply added a couple of feet of flex pipe that I used to deflect the exhaust into a shallow hole in the ground (maybe 1.5 ft wide by 1.5 ft deep) and at 8 ft distance all you could hear were clacking valves and very little other engine sounds.
Old carpeting as an inner lining of an enclosure also absorbs lots of noise, just be sure that adequate air space is there for cooling or maybe add a fan.
Wow, I posted this and this is my first visit back. Thanks for a ton of feedback. So from what I am reading, the Honda is still hands down the best for reliability and quiet, but champion ranks in there pretty close for reliability.
This WILL be used mostly for camping, and noise IS a big concern. I too, have had others crank theirs on and blast you out and have no desire to be him. We have single AC unit on our trailer and I am planning a 3KW generator minimum. I want to be able to use the AC should I have to. I know most "campgrounds" have a 9 or 10pm rule, so I guess if it's that hot, I only stop where elec hook ups are available.
The Yamaha inverter 3KW model I looked at, had elec start and some special surge circuits, and it's price was $2500. Man this is going to be a tough call.
The eu3000 can be bought out of KY for 1900 look up rvpartscountry.com. I have a 2000 withcounless hours on it. It runs my camping trailer in summer and the cabin in Canada in the winter. It runs a 60 amp charger that charges a bank of batteries and a 4000 watt inverter that powers the cabin and trailer. The Honda rarely comes off of idle so it is very quiet, most don't realise there is even a generator running until I tell them. If you don't have the money for the Honda or Yammie the Generac is the only other one I have experience with. Get a quiet unit or your neighbors will not appreciate it. CJ
Wow, I posted this and this is my first visit back. Thanks for a ton of feedback. So from what I am reading, the Honda is still hands down the best for reliability and quiet, but champion ranks in there pretty close for reliability.
This WILL be used mostly for camping, and noise IS a big concern. I too, have had others crank theirs on and blast you out and have no desire to be him. We have single AC unit on our trailer and I am planning a 3KW generator minimum. I want to be able to use the AC should I have to. I know most "campgrounds" have a 9 or 10pm rule, so I guess if it's that hot, I only stop where elec hook ups are available.
The Yamaha inverter 3KW model I looked at, had elec start and some special surge circuits, and it's price was $2500. Man this is going to be a tough call.
The reviews on the HD site are surprisingly good. It seems logical that someone could make a generator as good or nearly as good as the Honda for less money.Has anyone used the Ryobi inverter generators they sell at Home Depot? A couple hundred watts more running power and they can be run in parallel. 4.5 stars from reviews on the web site and only $599 each.
Ryobi 2200-Watt Gasoline Powered Digital Inverter Generator-RYI2200 at The Home Depot
Looking at the Champion web site they do NOT list an RV AC unit as something it will power. I wonder why that is?
Honda isn't a brand that I hold in such high regard that I would pay that much of a premium just for the name.