QUOTE(Lance951 @ Jan 10 2007, 11:22 PM)
I was wondering how many of you have the onan generators in your campers, I was looking at the 2500 LP, It's says it will run the air with power to spare, but when I look at other generators like honda, they say you need 3000 watts. Can you guys give me any input on this?
Craig
I have a 97 Legend 990 with an LP powered 2500 watt Onan gen set. I run the crap out of it if I need to. I read were folks are very worried about propane usage versus gasoline. Personally I run both. For general dry camping battery charging and lighting the camp site up in the evening I run a Honda 2000i. For the bigger stuff, like Microwave and A.C.? I merely switch plugs and fire up the Onan. This combination has allowed me to rarely exceed one 7 gallon tank of propane during a weeks dry camping period. The cool thing about propane is the fact it is so clean burning. Easy on spark plugs, way cleaner oil.
As we use our camper for trips lasting mostly around four days we rarely if ever switch over to our second 7 gallon tank. To be more detailed this includes running the A.C. darn near 24/4 while camping out in the Mojave Desert.
I believe before people totally bash Lance for equipping their units with propane only gen units need to seriously consider how much time they actually plan to spend off the grid. But then I have been caught in 2 feet snow storms while my other bud's are dang near out of propane in their big fifth wheels. Why? Because their heaters gobble up so much propane trying to keep momma and the kids warm. A smaller area (My camper) to heat plus coupled with an 8200 btu heater saves on propane bigtime! Versus how big for the luxury sized units? Sorry if I am getting off track here. But fact is, same goes for running generators in the heat. Bigger means more whereas Campers, well insulted campers require less compressor time translating to less pull on your gen set only in a much smaller area.
I hoped this helped