Still no power in Spring. No generator. Gonna be a long few days.
FarmerJohn said:
They aren't that sophisticated.
Almost embarrassed to ask such a potentially stupid question, but how do you choose which appliaces to allocate power to with these? Through the breaker box? Also, how to you know how much capacity is needed to run just a handful of predetermined things.drmwvr said:htxag09 said:
How many of them actually service and maintain them how they're supposed to, though? Especially seeing how some just ran for 100-200+ hours a month and a half ago? A generator isn't a set it, forget it, and always be covered type investment.
Also, it should be a reality and taken into consideration when fiscally looking at generators and when planning for emergency situations. The number of these things has grown exponentially. Don't expect parts or techs to be readily available
The above is a big reason why I just go with the interlock kit and portable generators. The unknowns really tip the scale to make the $20k in investment worth it to me.
~18 year old Briggs and Stratton. Ran for 14 days straight during Ike and a few more days here and there since then. Keep them maintained and they fuel drained when not in use and they will last a long time. Currently running two window units, two refrigerators, one tankless hot water heater, tv, three fans plus misc lights and chargers. Works like a champ!
Ag_07 said:
Sounds to me like a handful of folks on here need to work on the hurricane preparedness.
ALWAYS be prepared. This way it won't matter where it makes landfall or how strong of a storm it is. All your shlt will be sitting in the garage ready to rock and roll if need be.
Don't depend on others because at the end of the day you've got to fend for yourself.
South Platte said:I'm seeing those as well. $15,000 essentially down the tubes in those cases. At that investment level, failure is simply not an option.BBRex said:sts7049 said:
If you have elderly parents to deal with, you should have already had a plan in place for what you were going to do during a hurricane. with consideration for the potential for extended power outages, which should be a surprise to nobody on the gulf coast.
if you didn't do that ahead of time, that's not centerpoint's problem. obviously them having their ****e together would have made it easier, but that's not the real issue here
My wife, who is on the neighborhood Facebook page, said there were starting to be messages asking about Generac error codes and the generator not staying on. Some said that callers asking about service were told it could be a while before a technician comes out. Not everyone who has an emergency now started without a plan.
If you weren't opening it a bunch yesterday, it won't be. Our neighbors across the street are out of town and told us this morning we could raid their 2 fridges for any food before it goes bad, so knowing one of their neighbors has a whole home, we asked if we could run an extension cord from it to their house, and he agreed. We plugged in both and when I checked the food, it was all still frozen solid. At that time, it would have been without power for 29 hours.Seanzy2012 said:randy828 said:+1BillYeoman said:Seanzy2012 said:
Neighbors have power across the street since last night, but we still don't. I get that it's not all the same, but it messes with the mind a bit.
That happened to me after Ike . Drove me insane.
I wanted to award Cemterpoint a Silver Star for Psychological Warfare.
Funny to see extension cords running across the street. One of my neighbors across the street let me use his portable generator for the extra week we didn't have electricity after they got it.
My brother is a lineman, and he and I have had this discussion before, but still drives me nuts.
We don't have a transfer switch on our power box, so no way to hook up generator. We could do the fridge I guess, but I think the food is lost anyway.
William Foster said:Almost embarrassed to ask such a potentially stupid questuion, but how do you choose which appliaces to allocate power to with these? Through the breaker box? Also, how to you know how much capacity is needed to run just a handful of predetermined things.drmwvr said:htxag09 said:
How many of them actually service and maintain them how they're supposed to, though? Especially seeing how some just ran for 100-200+ hours a month and a half ago? A generator isn't a set it, forget it, and always be covered type investment.
Also, it should be a reality and taken into consideration when fiscally looking at generators and when planning for emergency situations. The number of these things has grown exponentially. Don't expect parts or techs to be readily available
The above is a big reason why I just go with the interlock kit and portable generators. The unknowns really tip the scale to make the $20k in investment worth it to me.
~18 year old Briggs and Stratton. Ran for 14 days straight during Ike and a few more days here and there since then. Keep them maintained and they fuel drained when not in use and they will last a long time. Currently running two window units, two refrigerators, one tankless hot water heater, tv, three fans plus misc lights and chargers. Works like a champ!
Look, I'm not going to defend CP for much, but if these crews were a few hours away at hotels, I'm fine with that. I'd much prefer them to be at hotels with power relaxing and pulling their puds than here in Houston riding it out without power. Once the storm passes, drive in well rested with full bellies to get to work.The Porkchop Express said:
Centerpoint admits all those extra repair personnel weren't actually in Houston on Monday. And that they were taken by surprise by the storm's intensity.
https://www.khou.com/article/news/investigations/centerpoint-power-outage-crews-not-staged-in-advance/285-24aa531a-9bb6-4e5e-b793-b7a1a0601340
Hou-Ag said:
Parent's Generac came on for 6 hours yesterday and then shut-off. After the boatload of money and year and half wait for install, not sure they are worth it.
we live in Texas, is there ever a lawn equipment off-season?Ag12thman said:My opinion is you can use gas with ethanol as long as you use it all and don't let it sit in your generator for months after use. But, I would run ethanol-free gas through it on it's last use before you put it up for storage. The reason is ethanol-based gas will go through a separation phase while sitting for long periods and the ethanol will sink to the bottom of the gas tank. This usually occurs within 6 months of sitting, I believe (someone please correct me if this is wrong). When starting the engine after the separation phase has occurred, only ethanol will be drawn in, clog the carburetor, and the engine will not start. I'd also recommend changing out the ethanol-free gas at least once a year. I believe ethanol-free gas will last several months (8 minimum). It would be even better to run your generator until it runs out of gas totally before you put it away for storage.CAR96 said:
Why is ethanol free gas so important for the generator?
Note: This all applies to lawn equipment as well - mowers, string-trimmers, chainsaws, edgers, blowers, etc. especially before you put them in storage for the winter.
Hou-Ag said:
Parent's Generac came on for 6 hours yesterday and then shut-off. After the boatload of money and year and half wait for install, not sure they are worth it.
AgLiving06 said:
CenterPoint just messing with me now.
Get a text saying power has been restored. Neighbors all got the same text.
I wisely didn't turn my generator off, but instead, flipped the generator breaker off and main on. No power.
Not surprising since I haven't seen CenterPoint around here, but why get people's hopes up.
At least Xfinity isn't bothering to tell us anything.
StringerBell said:
Haha mom got off the flight in Austin and immediately got notification that her power was just turned back on
I think this is where I'm going to end up. Right now, I just have a small 3000W generator to run portable AC, fans, chargers, and a couple of lights - enough to not make it miserable. But I'm not sure I want to drop $15K to make it so that we go from not miserable to comfortable for a couple of days every few years. Spending less than that for a generator that will power something like central AC, fridge, internet, etc. seems like the way to go.Sea Speed said:htxag09 said:
How many of them actually service and maintain them how they're supposed to, though? Especially seeing how some just ran for 100-200+ hours a month and a half ago? A generator isn't a set it, forget it, and always be covered type investment.
Also, it should be a reality and taken into consideration when fiscally looking at generators and when planning for emergency situations. The number of these things has grown exponentially. Don't expect parts or techs to be readily available
The above is a big reason why I just go with the interlock kit and portable generators. The unknowns really tip the scale to make the $20k in investment worth it to me.
For sure this. I'm in to my backup power about $1700 and should be able to power our garage apartment plus select circuits in our house or fewer circuits in the house and one home HVAC system. Really hard to justify an extra $10-$15 grand for the auto start generac.
aTm2004 said:If you weren't opening it a bunch yesterday, it won't be. Our neighbors across the street are out of town and told us this morning we could raid their 2 fridges for any food before it goes bad, so knowing one of their neighbors has a whole home, we asked if we could run an extension cord from it to their house, and he agreed. We plugged in both and when I checked the food, it was all still frozen solid. At that time, it would have been without power for 29 hours.Seanzy2012 said:randy828 said:+1BillYeoman said:Seanzy2012 said:
Neighbors have power across the street since last night, but we still don't. I get that it's not all the same, but it messes with the mind a bit.
That happened to me after Ike . Drove me insane.
I wanted to award Cemterpoint a Silver Star for Psychological Warfare.
Funny to see extension cords running across the street. One of my neighbors across the street let me use his portable generator for the extra week we didn't have electricity after they got it.
My brother is a lineman, and he and I have had this discussion before, but still drives me nuts.
We don't have a transfer switch on our power box, so no way to hook up generator. We could do the fridge I guess, but I think the food is lost anyway.
Charlie Murphy said:
Hate those. What is the point of beeping to tell you that it's low on power? Pretty obvious when you try to use something and it doesn't work. No need to rub it in by being annoyance in top of it.
Ag_07 said:
Sounds to me like a handful of folks on here need to work on the hurricane preparedness.
ALWAYS be prepared. This way it won't matter where it makes landfall or how strong of a storm it is. All your shlt will be sitting in the garage ready to rock and roll if need be.
Don't depend on others because at the end of the day you've got to fend for yourself.
my brother tried to use my parent's generator after the derecho. Dad said he ran it empty when he last used it years ago. He couldn't get it started.Cepe said:
I usually run my generator to empty before long term storage. Is that the wrong way to think about it?
texasaggie2015 said:
I'm not sure how but everything in my freezer was completely defrosted by last night. Everything has already been thrown out.