Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!!

   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #1  

Rebeldad1

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Sep 16, 2009
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Location
Hughett Bend Washington
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Kioti Tractor, John Deere Mower,New Holland Mini Excavator
I see mention of these pop up in forums sometimes

How about someone (s) who has and uses one tell up your experience?

We are remote and loose power more often than not during storms. I have 3 generators. Honda EU1000I. EU2000I and a 9500W dual fuel standing by for long outages when everything needs to be run. Well pump especially.

The EU1000I is our goto for evening outages. light weight and sips fuel. We cook (heat) on the woodstove. 1 cable thru the window... Generator runs TV. Directv. Internet. This will run for a couple evenings on a tank. Coffee maker (couple more cables) requires the EU2000I. Can also run the refer and freezer, micro wave. The 9500W will do all and everything but sucks up fuel.
We are at that age looking at all home gen system to simplify messing with everything..

The Lithium generators from a dummies view look like a great answer to most of our needs. Could just put it in a corner.
I dont understand the ratings as to what they can run and for how long?
How long battery is and is it replaceable?
The good and bad?

I am sure lots of you have more experience and guidance.

I'm sure lots of us would love to share in your knowledge. I'm ok now but smart enough to know I need to upgrade for happier days in old age to come
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #2  
I would like to take your thread off topic with the first reply. You're welcome.

Is propane an option in your area? I have a 1000 gallon tank buried in the back yard. It powers the furnace, hot water heater, and backup generator. When power goes out, the generator is running within seconds, and the tank can run the generator for a loooong time. Even if my propane was running low prior to an outage, I would expect that the delivery trucks would still be operational.

Sorry for the detour. Hopefully, somebody else knows something about your OP.
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #3  
First of all, it annoys me to see manufacturers reffering to batteries as "FUEL". Confuses people who dond't have a clue about energy even more. Or worse, calling a battery a "Generator".

Whole discussion about backup surrounds energy density and storage. What you never know in most outages is HOW LONG WILL THE POWER BE OUT? Anything with battteries is no good if you can't recharge it. Cell sites apparently found this out in TEXAS with rolling blackouts. The "ON" times were not long enough to recharge their batteries.
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!!
  • Thread Starter
#4  
The opportunity I hear is the Lithium battery's ability to do a much better storage of electricity than the wet cell has ever done.
Most of our power outages are short. Couple hours to 12-14 hours max. A rarity once was a power sub station down for over a week.

A friend bought a new 36' 5th wheel trailer. A gas generator was no longer offered. Lithium battery installed. Same size batteries as his old rv He was told 1/2 the weight and twice the output. A add-on was a solar panel on the roof. The real plus was no noise and no fuel needed.

So back to my post.

What would be a good Lithium generator to replace using my small gas generators? For now I will keep them around to recharge the Lithium battery if needed. The bigger stuff ( well pump, stove etc) I will use the 9500w dual fuel if needed.
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #5  
you need to determine wattage, and length of use. its nothing more then a battery. it will not replace a generator for most people with over a day of no power.
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #7  
I have an Cummins Onan Quiet Diesel Generator, 7.5 KW that you can stand beside and easily have a conversation. REAL Generators that can run for days and days and days need not be noisy.
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #8  
I have never heard of a Lithium battery generator. So I checked out two of the recommended brands. Both sites recommended use, to power - cell phones, laptops, portable GPS units. Both sites sure used a lot of "high tech" terminology and undefined double-speak. Will they power your refrigerator, by itself, for 24 hours - NO. TV - NO Well pump - NO. Hot water heater - NO.

Sound a awful lot like a toy for the uber rich and those who need to brag about "saving the environment".
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #9  
First of all, it annoys me to see manufacturers reffering to batteries as "FUEL". Confuses people who dond't have a clue about energy even more. Or worse, calling a battery a "Generator".
Yup, they will say anything to get them sold!!

SR
 
   / Lithium battery generators for Dummies PLEASE!!! #10  
Lithium battery "generators" won't do what you want. You have to have a way to recharge them as they are just small batteries, and very expensive batteries. Most of the ones I have seen won't power a coffee maker. Recharge your phone, run your computer for a little while, yes.

The whole house versions are Powerwalls (from Tesla), or Enphase, or Siemens, but you will need a way to charge them up absent grid power. Many folks farther south from you have large solar panel arrays installed already, and it becomes simple to recharge the whole house batteries. If you expect to be out during the winter, you may need a pretty large array to have enough solar power where you are. I would have a look at the thread jaydee325 mentioned. To put it in the ballpark, two Tesla Powerwall batteries would basically match your 9500W generator, (10kW, 26.8kWh) but you are looking at $15,000+/-, with no solar. Enphase and Siemens are more expensive at the moment. It all comes down to how much power you want for how long.

RVs are small (200sqft), low power, are easy to put solar on the roof, and you can get by easily on solar during the summer, if you are just using it for lighting. But you aren't running your RV AC for very long if you don't have a generator onboard. Most RVs have propane heating, propane stoves, and propane powered refrigerators, so the electrical load is quite small compared to a normal house.

Where you are, (I am guessing), I suspect that most cost effective solution is probably a whole house generator off of a large propane or diesel tank. There may be other reasons to prefer a solar system with battery, but given your latitude, solar is going to be pretty weak during the winter. You can add more panels to compensate, but that makes it pricier.

Good luck.

All the best,

Peter
 

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