Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Affordable generator for home available

- Sound advice DON LINDICH Read columns and product reviews by Don Lindich at soundadvic­enews.com.

Q. I have a Sony CDP302 CD player that has been unused for 25 years. It is not hooked up to anything so I do not know if it works. Is it worth having it looked at to see if it can be sold, or do you think it is too old? — D.W.

A. Just put a CD in it and press play. The display will tell you if it is working or not. The CDP-302 is a good vintage player worth $150 to $200 if you can find a buyer for it.

Affordable emergency power for your home: As of late, I have received many questions about battery-powered phone-charging products due to the storm-related power outages that occurred in different parts of the country. This is a good time to remind everyone a generator system that can power a good part of your home may be less expensive than you might expect.

Years ago, a huge winter storm left me without power for three days, and I will never forget shivering through that miserable, cold and dark weekend. Afterward, I pondered installing an automatic standby generator, but the big expense and complexity dissuaded me as power outages in my neighborho­od are very infrequent.

A few years ago, I found a solution that made sense practicall­y and financiall­y. I had a manual transfer switch profession­ally installed into my home’s electrical panel and paired it with a Briggs & Stratton QuietPower Q6500 Inverter Generator. The key here is the inverter technology, which provides clean power that is safe for use with electronic­s such as computers and television­s.

When I got my Q6500 generator, they were $1,499. Now, they are widely available in the $1,200-$1,300 price range. The transfer switch is about $400. So, for less than $2,000 and a few hours of an electricia­n’s time, you can have a system that will make you forget the power is out at all.

Now when the power goes out, I flip the transfer switch, wheel out my generator and connect it to the outdoor inlet box. The transfer switch sends power from the generator over the home’s electrical wiring, just as if the power was coming from the electric company. It is pretty neat the first time you try it, knowing the power in your house is coming from the generator outside and you are completely disconnect­ed from the power grid.

There are two caveats I must add here. The first is the Q6500 inverter generator is not CARB-compliant, so unfortunat­ely readers in California will have to look for a different option.

The second is that running a large home AC system may be beyond the abilities of the generator, so if you want to run your airconditi­oning in the summer, you may need something more powerful.

My biggest concern was wintertime and running the furnace, refrigerat­or and everything else necessary for living comfortabl­y in cold weather, so I did not have my central air conditione­r circuit connected to the transfer switch panel. If the power goes out in the summer, I will just open the window and run fans.

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