Im building a house in Oakmont/Bryan
How is the grid? Stable?
How is the grid? Stable?
Barnyard96 said:
Thanks guys. I have a small generator that'll probably do the trick. I'm just trying to think of all the things I might want while I'm building the place.
THIS!.BQ_90 said:Barnyard96 said:
Thanks guys. I have a small generator that'll probably do the trick. I'm just trying to think of all the things I might want while I'm building the place.
Depending on your generator you may have the electrician build in way to plug then generator into your panel to run the critical things in the house
BrazosWifi said:
Running the Natural gas line to the place where a generator may go in the future is also a great idea.
We didn't and I had to have one run and that was a pain.
Wires are easy to re-route. Gas lines, not so much.
I suppose you could, depending on your setup.Barnyard96 said:BrazosWifi said:
Running the Natural gas line to the place where a generator may go in the future is also a great idea.
We didn't and I had to have one run and that was a pain.
Wires are easy to re-route. Gas lines, not so much.
Could you come off the pool heater line?
JMac03 said:
I have learned that our house is either on the fire station or hospital grid - and we very rarely lose power, or if we do, it comes back quickly. We never lost power during the massive ice storm a few years back.
So always find a house on one of the grids and a generator generally isn't needed.
I have a 5,500 Watt propane generator that will run my frig, freezer, TV and some lights. For heat I have a Mister Heater Buddy that will heat enough of my house and can be used indoors. I probably have $1,200 total in the two and have used them about every three years for a few days. We have probably lost electricity six or seven days in the past 10 years. Good enough for me.Dumbfounded said:
We have a 8500W portable Generac generator and a transfer panel with all items on it that we want to power during a power outage. There is a plug on the outside of the house adjacent to the electric panels that you plug in from the generator. The generator was about $1,000 and the transfer panel and all the wiring was another ~$500 (electrician did this while we were building our house).
We have the HVAC system, pool equipment, tankless water heaters, garage doors, internet, three refrigerators, and strategic lighting and plugs all on the transfer panel. Worked great.
Great economical option vs the $15k option.