The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Preparing for a big freeze: Buying a portable generator

- By Laura Daily

The best tip for buying a portable home generator: Don’t wait until the lights go out.

Gasoline-powered portable generators, which cost from about $400 to $1,500, based on their output and features, are not only readily available at home-improvemen­t stores, they’re easy to use. “If you can operate a lawn mower, you can operate a generator,” says Art Aiello, spokesman for Generac, one of the largest manufactur­ers of portable generators. “In winter, it doesn’t take a lot of snow or ice to bring down a power line in certain neighborho­ods. If you have the ability to pull it out, add fuel and attach extension cords, a portable is a sound solution.”

The trick, as any good Scout would say, is to be prepared. Still, some homeowners procrastin­ate.

It was only after more than four years of several multiday outages every winter that attorney Rebecca Neale and her husband, Thom, had an electricia­n install a manual transfer switch (more about that later) at their Bedford, Massachuse­tts, home, and ponied up for a portable generator. Now they use it to provide power to the furnace, refrigerat­or, sump pump and select electrical outlets. “I waited so long because I’m cheap,” Neale admits. “But, I was tired of our lives being interrupte­d or worrying the pipes would freeze. I kick myself for not getting one sooner.”

Kari Torstenson, a Charlotte, North Carolina-based publicist, tells a similar story. Her home had lost power four times since she and husband Thor moved in. Still, it wasn’t until the couple welcomed a baby and Hurricane Florence was predicted to strike the North Carolina coast that a generator moved to the top of their musthave list. “While we’re several hours inland, we knew the hurricane would bring enough wind and rain to bring down oak trees into the power lines,” she says.

They bought a $725 portable generator less than 24 hours before Florence roared ashore. Without power for five days, the family could keep the refrigerat­or going to store milk and use the microwave to heat their daughter’s bottles, as well as charge their phones and laptop. “It was a large expense, but beneficial,” Torstenson says. There was no way to know when the power would be restored, but this way I was less concerned. The following month, we even lent the generator to my brother and sister-in-law when their power went out during Hurricane Michael.”

Here’s what you need to know about buying a portable generator.

Assess your situation

How frequently do you experience power outages? Are they a few hours or overnight? (Most outages usually last only three hours, says Paul Hope, senior home editor for Consumer Reports.) Is your home habitable without power? Could you make it for more than a few hours without heat or air conditioni­ng? How much food do you typically have in the refrigerat­or and freezer? What’s your level of sanity when there is no power? If it makes you anxious, miserable or just plain nuts to be without electricit­y, a generator may be better than Xanax.

Calculate how much power you need

Generators are sized based on the power they provide an average home. Go through your home and identify the lights, electronic­s and appliances you want to run and the watts they consume. That’s simple enough to figure out with lamp or light fixture that takes a 60-watt bulb, and tougher to determine with your refrigerat­or. Aiello says to look for the data plate found on most appliances. It should tell you the volts and amps. Then do the math: Volts multiplied by amps equals watts. Or go online and look up the specs. Generac also has an online portable-generator sizing calculator you can use as a guide.

Keep in mind that extension cords running from a generator can power anything that plugs into a wall socket, but not hard-wired appliances such as a furnace, sump pump or central air conditione­r. If you want to run any of those during an outage, you will need to have a licensed electricia­n install a manual transfer switch (it looks like a mini circuit breaker) next to your main electrical panel. A heavyduty cord from the generator plugs into the switch and allows you to power select circuits in your home. Prices vary depending on your market. In Neale’s case, she paid about $1,200 for the switch and installati­on, more than for the generator, which cost about $550.

(No portable generator can power an entire house; for that you’ll need a different category of generator, called a home standby or whole-house generator, which will cost $2,500 to $4,500, plus installati­on, something that can run in the thousands, depending on where you live.)

Pick your features

Models come with either a recoil handle (similar to a lawn mower) or electric push-button start, and one or more outlets to plug in extension cords. Some include covered outlets, illuminate­d control panels or automatic shutdown in case oil runs low. Portables can weigh from 100 to 250 pounds, so you’ll want to buy a wheel kit. With the wheels installed, a generator can be rolled like a wheelbarro­w into place.

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