That's a construction generator. It doesn't belong at a campground. Uniess your planning to camp alone in the wilderness, please respect your neighbors and fellow campers and get a low noise generator that's appropriate for allowing you and those around you some quiet R&R.
When using a generator that has a L14-30 twist lock outlet, be sure that the generator over current protection (breaker) will let you know when you have too many things on at the same time... I call it "on the job training". It's safe and not something you want to test on a regular basis so keep this in mind. Joe Phebus is correct about the noise... be kind to your neighbors.
That's a construction generator. It doesn't belong at a campground. Uniess your planning to camp alone in the wilderness, please respect your neighbors and fellow campers and get a low noise generator that's appropriate for allowing you and those around you some quiet R&R.
Here’s my article on contractor generator noise. You are correct that they don’t belong in a campground. https://open.substack.com/pub/rvelectricity/p/the-abcs-of-generator-noise?r=1txmtl&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false
I would agree but not even in a wilderness setting! Save this genny for the construction site, or as an emergency home generator.
When using a generator that has a L14-30 twist lock outlet, be sure that the generator over current protection (breaker) will let you know when you have too many things on at the same time... I call it "on the job training". It's safe and not something you want to test on a regular basis so keep this in mind. Joe Phebus is correct about the noise... be kind to your neighbors.