Anyone thinking twice about getting a generator? Stop thinking!

I could sum this up in about 5 seconds, but what fun is that. If you'd like a short/long winded rambling read, please continue :)
Although this has been brought up many times over the years, some people (myself included), try to justify the cost of purchasing a generator.

At the beginning ( a year ago), my tank was up and running, 1-2 months if that. We had a storm roll in and lights began to flicker. Well, at that point I had no generator and no power back up to even think about, if the power were to go out. As those lights flickered, I could think of nothing but losing livestock and having the tank crash. Hell with the food in the fridge and freezer, but the tank was my only concern. While the lights flickered I was online window shopping at generators. Certainly not liking the sticker price on them, I realized it was a need. Talked out loud about it with the wife, and she confirmed my need (although this isnt her hobby or care). They are live animals that needed taken care of. So the lights stopped flickering and nothing ever came of it. But later that night, I thought of putting it off, but figured, uh, dumb idea. Just get it. So a few hundred dollars later, it was purchased and shipped to me within a week or so.

I have this new, shiny generator sitting in my garage on reserve. Waiting to be called upon. Figures, no power outage, but I have a generator :(

About 6 months later, my first short term power outage came my way. It was only 2-3 hours, but I got to use the generator. Had all my "must have" equipment plugged in and it was rolling flawlessly. Fun to be able to use it and have it earn it's keep around here. It was very short term, but hey, it did what I needed.

Let's fast forward to Wednesday, March 1st, at 3:30am. This is where things got real interesting. At 3:30, my thunderstorm/tornado warning siren went off. Both, on my phone, as well as the siren right by my house. That SOB was blaring loud. It was a different loud than I have heard in the past. Other times it was thunderstorm warnings. Got out of bed in a hurry, rounded up the dogs, and we headed down to the crawl space. I had the crawl space door cracked so the dogs wouldn't go back out. As I was looking in the doors direction, I started seeing leaves, branches, and whatever else flying past it in a hurry. I heard nothing but wind. Again, didn't think much of it. Figured it was heavy winds and a thunderstorm. Boy was I wrong, it was a small tornado (if there is such a thing). At about 3:45, when I was down there, the power went dead. At 4:00 I got out of the crawl space with the dogs and headed to the garage to pull out the generator. Still not knowing what had happened, got the generator up and running and the tank plugged in. All was well. About 5 hours later, when there was daylight, I decided to take a walk to the end of my road where there was a line of cars just sitting. Many cars were turning around and trying to go another route, to be stopped and re routed to where they came from. They weren't getting out. As I got to the end of the road I saw the path where a tornado plowed through. It went for about a half a mile taking everything in it's way with it. Including about 6-8 power poles. The power pole that fed my house was snapped in half. transformer and power lines lying in the road. These cars weren't going anywhere fast. Utilities couldn't come in and clear lines or trees until Duke cut the power. Not sure what they were waiting for. So at that point, I realized, I wasn't going anywhere anytime soon, and power was not going to be restored any time soon as well.

Back to the house I went. With temps dropping to the low 30's/high 20's, with an occasional spitting of snow, this house cooled off quickly. Within 3 days time, it went from low 70's, do high 40's. As you can imagine, this made the fish tank struggle to keep it's heat when the outside temps were dropping. Early Friday morning, I woke up stupid early, hard to sleep in cold temps, and came out to check on the tank. Temps in the tank were now mid-high 70's. I threw in another heater as a back up to help. That helped and the temps started to rise, slowly.

So around 6:00, power was restored. Generator still running for 3 days straight with ZERO flaws. I am now with heat, and full power and we are all back to normal.

In a nut shell, For anyone that is contemplating a generator or a power back up of some sort, stop contemplating. DO IT. You won't regret it! Without my generator I would have lost everything in a hurry. Think of the time/money you put in to your tank up to this point, this 300 or so dollar generator are pennies in a bucket when compared to the whole cost point. Save yourself the stress, money, and time of rebuilding, and purchase a generator. My generator was bought for this tank alone. I did not have the budget for a big one to run multiple items, but the least I wanted to take care of, was the fish tank. And I did. They are happy, and I am very glad I bit the bullet when I did. I am out some food in the fridge/freezer, that's a lot less money to replace those items than it would be to replace the inmates (livestock).
 
There is no reason not to have one unless you only have a small tank with a few hundred worth of livestock you don't mind losing. You can also use it to keep the deep freeze and fridge going or whatever - It's extremely useful.
 
Even better is a transfer switch so you dont have to run power cords through the house. Mine is not an auto switch but still better to flip a few breakers as needed and have the house acting as normal.

I got hit hard with Sandy right after I had bought my larger generator. At that moment it was the best purchase I have ever made. I have a smaller one in my race trailer that I could use before but it was for tanka dn fridge only...
 
Great story thank you for sharing. As part of my budgeting for my 180g I have a 3500 watt portable generator on the list. Eventually we want to get a whole home generator but the portable will do in the meantime.
 
I had the same issue this week. Wife called me at work Tuesday to tell me the power went off prior to noon. It ended up staying off until last night.

We ran down to HD, dropped $400, came home and fired that bad boy up. Kept both tanks, both freezers, AND my Xbox/big screen running for a couple of days. At the end of the day, it's really not that much money. About the cost of a decent skimmer.

Now...the whole house "it's like nothing ever happened" style generators start around $5k. That's a decent chunk of change. But $400?? As the OP said, there's really no excuse not to have one.
 
Now...the whole house "it's like nothing ever happened" style generators start around $5k. That's a decent chunk of change. But $400?? As the OP said, there's really no excuse not to have one.


Add about $300 to your genny cost and you can have the house wired for at least manual transfers like I have. I keep all lights, home theater, internet, fish, fridges, hot water heater, and such all running with my genny. I cant run the AC though in the summer so need fans. The start of of the condensor is too much to handle...
 
Gotta have em. When I had set up my 3rd tank in my old 3rd floor apt. I ran out and bought one (100lbs) carried that beast up to my apt and stuck it under the kitchen table for the winter. My girl never said a peep, not only did my tanks have an insurance policy in place but I found my wife!

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Add about $300 to your genny cost and you can have the house wired for at least manual transfers like I have. I keep all lights, home theater, internet, fish, fridges, hot water heater, and such all running with my genny. I cant run the AC though in the summer so need fans. The start of of the condensor is too much to handle...

I have an electrician coming Tuesday to do that. :D

If need be, somewhere down the road, I'll eat the $400 I spent on this one and buy a bigger one for about a grand. Probably not going to go with the permanent fixture, runs on LP, auto sensor start, style. I don't mind pulling the cord and refilling a little gas from time to time.
 
I have an electrician coming Tuesday to do that. :D

If need be, somewhere down the road, I'll eat the $400 I spent on this one and buy a bigger one for about a grand. Probably not going to go with the permanent fixture, runs on LP, auto sensor start, style. I don't mind pulling the cord and refilling a little gas from time to time.

I have a 1K Rigid with Yamaha engine in it. It is 8500 watts. I like that it has a removeable control panel to bring into the house so I can see power usage and fuel level. It has electric start and such so the wife has no issues using it and I can fill it twice a day if heavy on the use as it lasts 8-11 hours with each tank.
 
I'll throw my story in here too.....

About 20 years ago I was in this hobby with a 90G basically FOWLR tank. Huge storm knocked out power for nearly 2 weeks. At that time we rented and didn't have a genny. I lost the entire tank and it killed my time in the hobby.

Fast forward 20 years and I own my own home and have a standby generator. We loose power at the least 3 or 4 times during the winter and that generator has saved my butt and tank more times then I can count.

Even a small portable generator that can be had for a couple hundred bucks is worth it's weight in gold when you need it. And its hella cheaper to buy it now, then when there is a massive power outage and everyone's looking to buy one.
 
I had the same issue this week. Wife called me at work Tuesday to tell me the power went off prior to noon. It ended up staying off until last night.

We ran down to HD, dropped $400, came home and fired that bad boy up. Kept both tanks, both freezers, AND my Xbox/big screen running for a couple of days. At the end of the day, it's really not that much money. About the cost of a decent skimmer.

Now...the whole house "it's like nothing ever happened" style generators start around $5k. That's a decent chunk of change. But $400?? As the OP said, there's really no excuse not to have one.

:fish1: Hi Elricsfate, the whole house generators are well worth the extra price, I live in South Florida and purchased a whole house unit 5 yrs ago. My unit runs the whole house including the central Ac units, but as you state they are very expensive, but well worth every penny if needed, and can be expensive to use, but I know when I lose power, I will have it as soon as the storm leaves the area. I went with a manual transfer switch, as I did not want the power to come on during a hurricane or other storm, until I could survey the house for any damage, that might cause a fire or electrocution if the power automatically came on. :fish1:
 
I recently bought a house and I'm in the process of setting up the system I've been dreaming of for years.

It's funny how people will dump all sorts of money into livestock and fancy reef equipment, but disaster planning and mitigation always takes a back seat. About 8 years ago I had s major disaster with a 30 gallon SPS tank and I easily lost $1,000+ in corals. Now I'm planning a 350 gallon display (with an additional 1,000 gallons sump and frag system) and the first thing I'm working on is how to support the tank during a power outtage.

To that end, I'm doing three things:

1) I have invested in an inverter/charger and a fairly large bank of batteries that will be able to support my tank for 1-2 days. The inverter/charger kicks on and off instantaneously.

2) I've started setting up a system to use my natural gas hot water tank to heat my system through a DIY heat exchanger and a hot water recirculation pump from Home Depot. The pump requires about 40 watts and, with some math, my 40,000 BTU gas hot water heater should have no problems heating a system of up to 4-5,000 gallons.

3) I have plans to purchase a natural gas generator that will give me indefinite power.

All said and done, I'll probably have about $3,000 invested in the above aspects, but I'll have great peace of mind. A couple of years back I experienced two multi day power outages. That would be a tremendous loss both financially and a good kick in the nuts to lose years worth of hard work in a reef system.
 
I have an electrician coming Tuesday to do that. :D

If need be, somewhere down the road, I'll eat the $400 I spent on this one and buy a bigger one for about a grand. Probably not going to go with the permanent fixture, runs on LP, auto sensor start, style. I don't mind pulling the cord and refilling a little gas from time to time.

Something for those of us with portable generators, have at 12 hours worth of gas on hand. With a major power outage (ice storm, 3 days) the local stations may not have power. Ours were shutdown for a while but shortly had brought in gerators. Even the local McDonald's had a big gas generator running in their parking lot.
 
What generator do you guys recommend if you are a renter in a 1br apt.?
I got the champion 4000, it's affordable, decently quiet but if you're concerned about noise bothering the neighbors a small Honda would best, they're very good quality and extremely quiet.

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