I have a regular maintenance schedule for mine and I run it at least every six months. I like to keep my empty of gas or I would run it more often as it is a pain to drain the gas every time I test it.
I have an older Harbor Frieght 7200 watt and I have an older little small 2 cycle one from Harbor Freight. I only use non-ethenoyl gas in them and I run them at least once a year. When Helene hit being prepared paid off because we had to use the larger one to run the refrigerators and freezer and some house lights and appliances, like the coffee pot. The little one will run for about 7 hours on a gallon of gas and will run a TV, some lights and phone chargers. Run them once a year, turn the gas **** off and let it run until it runs out of fuel to store it dry and use only non-ethenoyl gas.Is anyone servicing generators before cold or bad weather hits?
I'm curious because they never seem to be thought about until an emergency arises.
Don't people plan ahead anymore?
What about a bit of home learning?Unfortunately it’s a sign of the times. People are ignorant because they were never trained or exposed how things work. Schools decided they aren’t going to offer auto mechanics, wood working, home economics classes.
A couple of years back, New Zealand experienced Cyclone Gabrielle. I live in one of the worst hit areas. I was lucky. That was on the other side of the river.Funny thing is all the knowledge is so easily obtainable nowadays on the WWW but the young folk don’t have the interest until it’s broke and want a 5 minute fix without tools or basic knowledge.

Rare indeed. I wonder how many (of the rest) can light a fire? Or even manage a can opener?There’s a few youngsters doing what us old guys do but they are rare ( and cool!).
what millennial or younger generation even knows what a manual can opener is.... ahahahahaaaaaWhat about a bit of home learning?
A couple of years back, New Zealand experienced Cyclone Gabrielle. I live in one of the worst hit areas. I was lucky. That was on the other side of the river.View attachment 72471
Some places were without electricity for a week or more. Cellular operators brought wheeled generators to the towers - then some low-lifes (gangs) stole them. It was almost funny watching the modern generation wandering around in a zombie-like daze, signal-dead, then battery-dead cellphone held out in front of them. I had no mains electricity for about 48 hours, so the generators were busy.
Rare indeed. I wonder how many (of the rest) can light a fire? Or even manage a can opener?
My daughter and I are what's called 'preppers.' I.e. We take civil emergency preparedness further than just the basics. We could likely last two months. We have 4 portable gennies between us. One is 3-phase (400v AC) standard. That's ffor my deep well pump. The others are the inverter-type. Unfortunately, the biggest one (an EFI) has lost it's eco mode (rpm-load-regulated) functionality.
I fire up each one at least once every six months. Usually, I boil a kettle of water, while it's running. I try to get a trickle charger on to each battery-start-unit every 3 months. Sometimes that stretches a bit, if it's become hard to get at. The second smallest unit must have a minor battery current leakage fault. After twice replacing the battery, far too quickly, I now disconnect it between uses.
My daughter persuaded me to build a web page to plain-language explain generators to folks in her friends' circle. I've modified it a couple of times; but any critique is welcome.
Generators - For home use - a buying guide and an attempt to demystify them.
Hello M.,I have an older Harbor Frieght 7200 watt and I have an older little small 2 cycle one from Harbor Freight. I only use non-ethenoyl gas in them and I run them at least once a year. When Helene hit being prepared paid off because we had to use the larger one to run the refrigerators and freezer and some house lights and appliances, like the coffee pot. The little one will run for about 7 hours on a gallon of gas and will run a TV, some lights and phone chargers. Run them once a year, turn the gas **** off and let it run until it runs out of fuel to store it dry and use only non-ethenoyl gas.
Hello H.,Don't know why folks dislike leaving ethanol gas in generators.
Makes me lots of money.
Hello H.,what millennial or younger generation even knows what a manual can opener is.... ahahahahaaaaa