P
(PeteCresswell)
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
Older freezer/refrigerator.
Neither seems to have anything printed on the back that tells how many watts are
needed.
I'm shopping for a generator - but the smallest one that will run both the
fridge and the freezer concurrently, but nothing else.
Our power outages come only a few times per year and only last a few days max.
During that time, all I really want to do electric-wise is keep from losing the
contents of the fridge/freezer and be able to continue working through my PC
(which, I'm guessing, draws less than 1kw even with the monitor and other
peripherals.
Can anybody suggest a means of determining how much the fridge/freezer draw?
Alternatively, is there some ballpark maximum for devices like this. I'm hoping
2kw steady would do it and thinking in terms of a Honda eu2000 because of it's
quietness and ease of deployment.
Neither seems to have anything printed on the back that tells how many watts are
needed.
I'm shopping for a generator - but the smallest one that will run both the
fridge and the freezer concurrently, but nothing else.
Our power outages come only a few times per year and only last a few days max.
During that time, all I really want to do electric-wise is keep from losing the
contents of the fridge/freezer and be able to continue working through my PC
(which, I'm guessing, draws less than 1kw even with the monitor and other
peripherals.
Can anybody suggest a means of determining how much the fridge/freezer draw?
Alternatively, is there some ballpark maximum for devices like this. I'm hoping
2kw steady would do it and thinking in terms of a Honda eu2000 because of it's
quietness and ease of deployment.