How to Wire a Portable Generator | Ask This Old House
This Old House This Old House
2.08M subscribers
740,447 views
0

 Published On Feb 24, 2020

Ask This Old House master electrician Heath Eastman explains a few different methods for wiring a portable generator to a house.

SUBSCRIBE to This Old House: http://bit.ly/SubscribeThisOldHouse

Heath first showed a manual transfer switch, which designates specific circuits to be powered in the event of an outage and has to be manually switched from utility power to generator power.

He also showed an interconnect switch, which wires to the main breaker panel and allows the entire panel to be energized by the generator. Both of these should only be installed by a licensed electrician and can be purchased from an electrical supply house.

Time: 1-2 hours
Cost: $500 and Up
Skill Level: Professional only

Shopping List:
Portable generator [https://amzn.to/2SXHARR]

Steps:
1. Heath explains some of the ways that a portable generator can be professionally wired to a house.
2. First, never place the generator indoors or in a garage, as it generates carbon monoxide and is fatal. Always place it just on the outside of the house.
3. Most generators can be plugged into a power inlet box, which an electrician can then wire into the house and connect to the electrical panel.
4. Connecting to the electrical panel can be done in two ways:
a. The electrician can install a manual transfer switch, which connects to a selection of circuits that are most likely to be needed even when the power is out. Then, in the case of a power outage, the transfer switch can be powered on.
b. The electrician can also switch out the main breaker and an additional double-pole breaker with an interlock device and wire the generator directly to that. In the case of a power outage, simply lift the interlock lever, power the generator on, and then select the circuits you want powered on. This allows for more flexibility to use only the things you actually need in the case of a power outage.

Resources:
Heath showed the GP6500 COSENSE portable generator [https://amzn.to/2SZqOlo], which has a built-in carbon monoxide detector and is manufactured by Generac (https://www.generac.com).

About Ask This Old House TV:
From the makers of This Old House, America’s first and most trusted home improvement show, Ask This Old House answers the steady stream of home improvement questions asked by viewers across the United States. Covering topics from landscaping to electrical to HVAC and plumbing to painting and more. Ask This Old House features the experts from This Old House, including general contractor Tom Silva, plumbing and heating expert Richard Trethewey, landscape contractor Jenn Nawada, master carpenter Norm Abram, and host Kevin O’Connor. Ask This Old House helps you protect and preserve your greatest investment—your home.

Looking for more step by step guidance on how to complete projects around the house? Join This Old House INSIDER to stream over 1,000 episodes commercial-free: https://bit.ly/2GPiYbH

Plus, download our FREE app for full-episode streaming to your connected TV, phone or tablet:
https://bit.ly/34RYEP5
 
Follow This Old House and Ask This Old House:
Facebook: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseFB
Twitter: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseTwitter
http://bit.ly/AskTOHTwitter
Pinterest: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHousePinterest
Instagram: http://bit.ly/ThisOldHouseIG

Watch the full episode:
https://bit.ly/325MGRC

How to Wire a Portable Generator | Ask This Old House
   / thisoldhouse  

show more

Share/Embed