WinterDeere
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2011
- Messages
- 13,533
- Location
- Rural 'burbs, north of Philly
- Tractor
- John Deere 3033R, 855 MFWD, 757 ZTrak; IH Cub Cadet 123
After 15 years of back-feeding our house with a portable generator, while also trying to run a business out of our home and having my wife work remotely from home, I've accepted the reality that we need a whole house generator. Trouble is, only feasible location for electrical penetration into the house is out front, where the service mains (and well plumbing, and oil fills) enter, whereas our only fuel source (LP) is out back behind the pool. This is an "effing huge" house, we're talking several hundred feet of utility run to bring electric 'round bacj to near the LP tank, or to bring gas 'round front to near the electrical penetration.
I'm normally "everything DIY", and 10 years ago, I'd have been out there trenching myself, and rigging up the core drill for the required foundation penetrations. Hell, I installed my own heated in-ground swimming pool five years ago. But life and schedule changes, theres just no way I have time to deal with a full DIY install myself, today.
So here's the question: who do you call? A local electrician? Our LP gas company? Generac? How does one get this process started, for what is sure to be a relatively complex and "not straightforward" installation?
Complicating matters more than the sheer distance between fuel source and electrical mains, is the fact that this house has 7 breaker panels, most filled completely to capacity. Nothing is straightforward, here.
I'm normally "everything DIY", and 10 years ago, I'd have been out there trenching myself, and rigging up the core drill for the required foundation penetrations. Hell, I installed my own heated in-ground swimming pool five years ago. But life and schedule changes, theres just no way I have time to deal with a full DIY install myself, today.
So here's the question: who do you call? A local electrician? Our LP gas company? Generac? How does one get this process started, for what is sure to be a relatively complex and "not straightforward" installation?
Complicating matters more than the sheer distance between fuel source and electrical mains, is the fact that this house has 7 breaker panels, most filled completely to capacity. Nothing is straightforward, here.