Champion Open Frame Inverter Generator - Why Less is actually WAY MORE! Watch before you buy!
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- čas přidán 8. 07. 2024
- A review of my Champion Open Frame Inverter generator and why a generator with slightly less watts such as this one is WAY BETTER than a large generator!
This Champion unit is totally awesome and Champion is an excellent brand! I hope to purchase a dual fuel Champion in the future when I can afford one and will review it as well!
@ChampionPowerEquipmentHQ
@Outdoor_Prepper
I hear you about the smaller generator not using as much gas and that is a valid point.
I have a 11kw Wen generator and it can be a gas hog.
I mitigate that by using it to charge a few 100Ah LiFiPO4 batteries making it so I can run my whole house and have a great amount of on demand power.
If I don't need to run high power items, I can run off battery for several hours at a time and I only have to run the genny 4-6 hours a day in a power out situation as long as I'm charging the batteries while it is running.
Buying a 4kw genny is a lot more affordable than my system, you can pick up a 4kw for like $500.
My system with the 11kw genny, batteries and inverter costs about $1500. If you add solar panels with the batteries, tack on another $1000.
Thanks for watching! I agree and my plan is to run the generator to charge my Bluetti power station then run off the Bluetti for approx 15 hours before starting the generator again to recharge it.
I have to agree. Smaller generators use less fuel plus they usually cost quite a bit less than the larger ones. I have a 4000/3500 Wen open frame genny that runs 6 hours on 1.6 gallons of gas. I have the Champion 2500 Dual Fuel that runs about 20 hours on a 20# propane tank. I'm not sure about the gas tank capacity, but it has run about 9.5 hours (pulling a 50-60 percent load on a tank of gas. I gave $414.00 for the Wen genny and I got the Champion on a Limited Time Deal from Amazon for $442.00. These gennies saved us last summer here in East Texas during a 5 day grid failure during 100+ degree weather.
Thanks for watching and I totally agree with everything you said!
Running a moderate sized genset does make a lot of sense from a prepping standpoint. You're probably not going to be running everything under the sun in your house and you will likely be limited on fuel availability, so you have to make the fuel you have last!!! Having to run your generator for a couple of days is one thing but what if you need to run it a couple of weeks! Tornados are quite common here and t can easily take a couple of weeks for power to be restored again...
Thanks for watching and I totally agree with everything you said!
Champion is quiet, fuel efficient. Large gens 7kw + most times have dual or tri fuel, easier to get a big tank and run for weeks or maybe grid gas is still flowing.
Thanks for watching! I’ve been very pleased with the champion open frame inverter so far.
im new to generators,bought my 1st at home depot for a bit over 1k,with tax..biggest champion they had..I wanted power to spare,and it runs on gasoline or rino*type propane tank..it came with the gizmo for propane...
our elect came back on,jut as we got this unit ready to start,what a bummer???...i did let it run to break in for 15 min...still waiting to see how it preforms,,in the next outage.
Thanks for watching!
Smaller ones is better for longer run times
Thanks for watching and I agree!
that canned fuel is garbage. Goes bad very fast.
Thanks for watching and for the info. I have not used the canned fuel extensively yet so can’t really give feedback. What types of issues did you experience with it?
@@Outdoor_Prepper I watch a few small engine repair channels and they have demonstrated that the canned fuel wont even burn after a month or two of sitting in equipment. I had it happen to myself with a chainsaw.
I've never used the 4 stroke version of the canned fuel, but I know for a fact the 2 stroke canned fuel is awful.
"Less is more" thats NOT what she said.
🤣 thanks for watching!