elkslayer316
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Hello, i am new to this..i am looking to get a mep 803 10kw i see there are onan. fermont, and lister petter models. can anyone tell me the difference and what one is the best? thanks
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They are one and the same actually. Fermont was the assembler, Onan was the mfg of the gen head and Lister Petter makes the engines which are rebadged to Onan.Hello, i am new to this..i am looking to get a mep 803 10kw i see there are onan. fermont, and lister petter models. can anyone tell me the difference and what one is the best? thanks
My 003A (10K) runs my entire house including ac, my shop out back and a cord to the neighbors with no problem at all. It did this 24/7 for 7 days last storm season. This is not big box store advertised 10K ratings here...i want one for backup when power goes out. when it does were the last to be hooked up. my 3500 is out of commission so i thought i'd, upgrade. will be hooking it up to house. with only 10kw i will need to be selective on what to turn on. but better than running the little one around with extention cords. I really wanted an 004 but they are hard to find..
There's only 1 model 803.....that would be the 803a. With that said, some would say it's better to get a Fermont built 803a rather than the older Libby built 803a. YMMVi have propane furnace and a wood stove. i have 3 freezers, two water heaters . they are 18 amps each. i have an electrician i am working with...I really just need to know what model 803 is the best...I thought like the 804a or b. that the 803's had different motors etc..............thanks
Open to see what I wrote.Also, do not forget to consider fuel burn rate. If you expect extended outages it becomes very important to choose the right output generator due to fuel consumption factors. In addition, too much generator for the load can result in a wet stacked engine over time.
It really gets down to how do you want to live during the outage, life as usual with some excess wattage to burn? Or, run just the basics perhaps with some breakers turned off (load management)?
I did an electrical load audit by going around to every appliance and getting the running wattage. I then decided what was necessary, what would be nice and what wasn't really necessary during an outage. That will get you into the ballpark of what is needed. Initially, I thought bigger kW generators were better but was clued in about fuel strategy, especially during extended outages and went with a 5 kW unit (~7 kW effective output at my altitude) and am very glad I did.
(This is where a smart man starts. Figure out what you need/want to run, how much it draws, and then you will know what you need.)
However, I have Propane Water Heater and Forced Air Gas heat in addition to a Wood burning fireplace insert. With LED lighting almost everywhere in/out of house plus LED TV's I seem to average 25-30% load until something kicks on (refrigerator, freezer, well pump, septic pump, expresso machine, etc.) which brings it up to 50-90% loading depending on how much kicks on simutaneously. If push comes to shove, I can do a load of laundry during an extended outage and run my 5600 watt dryer running up to ~125% with other small loads still on but I have to manage any high consumption heavy electrical loads (temporarily switch off express machine, well pump, etc...).
Also, with today's ULSD Biodiesel laden bulk storage fuel it will go bad unless you have other diesel powered equipment to burn though your "treated" bulk storage fuel. You really shouldn't go much longer than a year in storage to insure your fuel is safe.
Are you sure that’s all you need it for? No air conditioning? What about stove and oven? Sounds like you live in a large home? We need more info.i have propane furnace and a wood stove. i have 3 freezers, two water heaters . they are 18 amps each. i have an electrician i am working with...I really just need to know what model 803 is the best...I thought like the 804a or b. that the 803's had different motors etc..............thanks
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