It may very well be a lot. But the LP stays viable for so much longer than diesel or gasoline. I'm looking for a standby system with the least amount of maintenance.
diesel treated with anti algaecide and sealed will last a long time.....
It may very well be a lot. But the LP stays viable for so much longer than diesel or gasoline. I'm looking for a standby system with the least amount of maintenance.
rpm's makes the volts.....load makes the amps......load = btu's.= hp......more load the btu's you need......
That's good enough for the scope of this discussion. It's true that rpm is responsible for the production of voltage and frequency.
It's also the energy in the fuel that provides the torque to maintain rpm. As long as the energy into the machine exceeds the energy out, you are basically ok (there is a whole other discussion about friction, heat, and sound that also consumes some of the input energy... ).
So say you have a 5hp engine that is running on gasoline and producing 5hp of torque. Then you hook up enough electrical load to equal 5hp (746 watts = 1hp. Again, this ignores other losses). In theory everything should be fine. Now you replace the gasoline with LP. As stated earlier, LP provides less energy than gasoline. Suddenly your engine is only producing 3.99hp. Your engine will likely stall quickly because the energy in the fuel can not keep that shaft rotating with all that load applied.
Hope that helps.
So, what you're saying, is that my 18hp generator producing 16.56hp running on LP that has been sitting in it's tank for 36 months will provide 7200 watts of electricity for my house.
Good to know.
Something else that is nice about propane, that you may have noticed. When you change the oil, it may look like new. Propane runs clean as a whistle.
Something else that is nice about propane, that you may have noticed. When you change the oil, it may look like new. Propane runs clean as a whistle.
yep no carbon.......propane is under a buc a gallon now....
Interesting side note- it's a Briggs motor and the user's guide recommends 5W-30 full synthetic for an operating range of -30 to 110* F
It's crazy. It is almost worth buying another tank and filling it.
i have 2 500 gallon tanks with 80% in each that i heat with......i got it for $.98.99 last week......i have 275 gallons of treated diesel from my gen......
How long can you reasonably store the diesel? I understand if you take air out of the equation, it greatly extends shelf life.
i have had it for over 4 years with and i test fire the gen every month....fires up and runs for 20min.....still smells and looks like the day i filled.......i have use only about 15 gallons.........power has only went out a few times.....
that is pretty good. At work the generators are diesel, I believe that is because the wattage demand is very high just to power critical systems (back to your comments about btu & hp). I don't know how many gallons they store but it is rated for 36 hours of continuous run time. Of course the wattage requirement for my home is really quite low to keep the basic systems running, that is why I can use propane as the fuel source.
How long can you reasonably store the diesel? I understand if you take air out of the equation, it greatly extends shelf life.
I've got a propane generator hard wired with an auto disconnect. When the power quits it comes on automatically and runs some of the house circuits, easy peasy for us geezers.
I don't recall if you bought that device or fabricated it yourself.? I like that luxury but I've only seen it on the 12kV and above stationary units.