CincyFlyer
Veteran Member
Ok so seams like a good deal then, it痴 a 1800 rpm which is great also!
Hopefully it has some internal gearing, as the PTO is likely 540 rpm at near max engine RPM.
Ok so seams like a good deal then, it痴 a 1800 rpm which is great also!
Hopefully it has some internal gearing, as the PTO is likely 540 rpm at near max engine RPM.
With "all the losses" through the system, you can pull 14kw out of a 28 pto hp tractor...
Those quoting higher, aren't figuring in the losses...
SR
OK, thanks. Will look into that.
Doing a little research after seeing this thread, I'm pretty sure it doesn't matter how much I need to run the whole house. My 16 hp tractor tops out with a 7200 amp generator anyway. Pretty sure my heat pump will take a lot more than that to keep the house warm. But, if I can power the fire place fan, the frig, the microwave, coffee maker and a couple of lights available, we'll survive till the power comes back on. Or, I run out of diesel.
With "all the losses" through the system, you can pull 14kw out of a 28 pto hp tractor...
Those quoting higher, aren't figuring in the losses...
Looking at the breaker size in your panel for the heat pump will give you a rough idea of what you need to run it. The breaker is going to be larger than the max draw of the heat pump. The name plate data no the heat pump woudl be even better, but depending on your installation it may be hard to get to. A 7200 watt generator should put out about 30 amps.
Personally, I prefer a stand-alone generator for emergency power. I seem to end up using my tractor pretty heavily during power outages.
With some careful load management, I ran my 2200 sq ft house (not including the basement, some of which is finished) with a 4000 watt continuous / 6600 watt surge generator during some extended power outages. My house is definitely not "all electric" like yours, Blackrams. I also had to do some switching here and their (for example, shutting of either my fridge or freezer before kicking on the deep well pump, which has a pretty good surge on startup). It took some attention to what we were running simultaneously, but it was manageable
First of all, I sure don't need power for an half hour outage! lolIf there was something on the tractor, the genset was buried, the tractor was buried, it was dark or the weather was bad, the operation took longer. Sometimes if it was getting late, I just wouldn't even bother. Shame. You have it, but it's too much hassle! And working with a GREASY pto coupling is always a treat. AND THEN, The power comes back on!
AND THEN, The power comes back on!
Thanks for responding.
Yep, I've got a 4500 Onan that I took out of an older self-contained RV. Used it once so far in five years. Was thinking the PTO generator would be an up grade but, maybe not. That Onan is a butt kick'n generator. Hard to beat, just was hoping to give my better half more energy for that "hot air" blower she can't live without.
Rams :drink:
Thanks for responding.
Yep, I've got a 4500 Onan that I took out of an older self-contained RV. Used it once so far in five years. Was thinking the PTO generator would be an up grade but, maybe not. That Onan is a butt kick'n generator. Hard to beat, just was hoping to give my better half more energy for that "hot air" blower she can't live without.
Rams :drink:
I use 2.5k & 4K gasoline generators. They will power some basics for an extended period of time & the smaller size with light loads sip fuel. I keep 8 5-gal cans stored. Kind of a pain dumping those into vehicles and refilling every spring & fall, but worthwhile overall I guess. With cycling the generator on/off vs running 24/7, 40 gal will stretch for quite a while.
I can see where a large PTO generator would be real nice - esp if you're already storing bulk amount of diesel. I can run enough stuff from smaller gasoline ones though to be OK. Not whole house, but can cycle fridge & freezer, run a portable heater or AC to keep a bedroom at a nice temp, microwave, convenience electronics, recharge UPS, etc.
What are the benefits of a PTO vs standalone?
You're just paying for the generator and not the engine to drive it, so more watts for less $$$ ?
If you already have an amount of diesel stored, you're already storing and rotating the fuel?
No maintenance (or questionable operation from lack of) for generator engine?
What else would make PTO preferred over a standalone? I think I'd just be turning too big a generator for what i need (wasting fuel) and tying up the only tractor I have so wouldn't make sense for me. But can see on a farm or something - esp if there was something power-hungry to feed - where it would be nice.