Check the video description for links! Or, jump straight to purchase this unit here: amzn.to/4911O2m And yes, I accidentally said CO2 detect a few times and not CO 😅😅😅 Seems I had CO2 on my mind. This gen has a carbon monoxide detector (CO). Forgive my sin!😬
Great review and you are the ONLY one doing that signature tear-down to see build quality and who actually made the components, which is so important. The market continues to flood with these new off-brands, and even some new manufacturers... It's crazy. I used to look the other way with all Chinese off-brands, mostly due to concerns over parts availability, longevity/reliability and sound. The fact that most of these components can be sourced online as needed, is huge. And the parts are cheap. Sound levels were interesting. Long life is a question mark, but again, with cheap replacement parts for many components, that may not be a big deal either.
Nice video. Some things I thought I would mention: 1. The sensor on these is a CO (carbon monoxide), not a C02 (carbon dioxide) sensor. CO is a poisonous gas commonly associated with burning hydrocarbons. CO2 is a waste product you exhale when you breath among many other things. Both will kill you in high enough concentrations. But CO is what you have to be most careful about and thus what the sensor is primarily there to detect. My understanding is burning propane tends to emit a lot less CO than gasoline does. Especially as you can get indoor 'sate' propane heaters, it could never be safe to do this if the propane heater was releasing a lot of CO. Kind of funny to think about years ago I was ranting online about the idea of plugin hybrid electric trucks needing to be there and also act as generators and went on about how CO sensors would be crucial to this as people would be dumb and run trucks like this in their garage for emergency backup power and kill themselves. Now it is all the rage to have CO sensors on generators. Makes me wonder if people actually do read my commentary. 2. As we have talked about the Pulsar GX400BN in the recent past, something to point out that was missed in the review you made is it does have running time tracking. The button on the display toggles different things to see and total and current running time are things the manual says are in there. So while this generator definitely has its flaws, there are also some nice features in it not always found on generators. 3. Maybe a way to put generator run time into perspective for people you can use is to compare oil changes to what you do with your car engine, at least if you want your car engine to last a reasonable life. A way I have thought to put it is if you look at how you typically use a generator engine and try to shoe horn that into car engine usage, the recommended oil change interval of your car engine is ~100 hours of generator run time. However, your car engine has an oil filter. These little generators do not. Then with a new generator, you are getting into all of the crap that gets into the oil when you break in the engine. Then as you get into these compact generators, the RPMs go up. The Pulsar GD400BN for example has been clocked in at 4,850 RPM. Maybe getting into more of how often you really probably should be changing the oil on these generators and how much sustained load you really want to put on these generators could make for a good discussion.
As always a very very good video and demo. Question, on the 2000w range suit case generators and after brake in, how many hours run time on average before oil change? (in warm to hot weather)
Much appreciated! Most small generators have an oil change schedule at 100 hours. After 3 changes, if things look good then I extend to 25 to 30 hours. What comes out of these little machines at 100 hours is pretty awful. From fuel dilution to general contamination... I rather service them at much tighter intervals.
i watched your youtube video on NEXPOW YH2200i... i ended up buying the unit at Walmart ($249)...i bought some of the amazon items you recommended for the unit...however, the oil change funnel is not available at Amazon anymore it seems...can you provide another source i can buy/get one at? Alex
Dang it. Today, I just ordered the BiltHard 2k gas genny based on your great outcome of its review. Now, it did come up shy of the 2k you expected. Think it topped out at 1940kw in your test I watched. Just went online n saw Walmart has this Nexpow @$329 but w a coupon it offred $30 off. So about same as the BH I bought. But i just ordered a hour meter, $12. The Nexpow has it bilt in. Ah well, they seem close enough for about same price. Next, Im liking the Heomaito hmt3500 dual fuel. Online order only. Costco had the Firman dual fuel @$799. Hoping for a July4th sale for the easier return policy. But the Heomaito sure looks good to me in your test. Want next genny aprox 4kwh for propane use only. I'll be watching ya for anymore surprises. AND, Howdy from Tx!
It will be fine but the nexpow is definitly a step up. Still the best overall budget gen I have found in this price range. And for sure, can't go wrong with the heomeito! They revved the PN to HMT4300iD now (same thing exactly). It just outperformed its labels with ease so their marketing capitalized on it. Much appreciated! Stay tuned, always more to come!
Would it help to break in by running ten minutes, clear shavings from metallic dipstick (but no oil change), and repeat 2 or 3 times before the 1 hour oil change? When you drain the oil on first change, are you seeing shavings in the oil? In other words, is the metallic dipstick catching them all or just some percent of them?
I have never had enough material to warrant cleaning that often while breaking in. Always aluminum stuff too which I call stripper dust. Looks like glitter. Obviously aluminum is not magnetic but also is less damaging. This gets flushed out with changes.
Good question, I do not at the moment. I have a new power harmonics analyzer being shipped to me next week and I will get those numbers at different loads. Looking at it in FFT and the waveform, I do not think it exceeded 5% even past 1800W. But, only testing will give the full story.
Sadly mine burned oil from the start, amazon refunded my money so basically got a free generator. It works good, but i need to add some oil to it each day.
I run 15w40 in my generators. If you are in a very cold climate, you could go down to a 5 or 10w40. They are easy to maintain. Just change oil on the regular and keep it clean. Pretty much it.
@@MR_Garage Thanks for your response. I’m a city boy who recently moved down south so I experience more power outages. I’m still learning to be “handy.” I enjoyed how detailed your video is, I was going to buy on a whim but got nervous when I heard the words, spark plug, carburetor, etc. Began to wonder if I’m over my head, ha! I appreciate you and your authentic responses and video. 🙏🏼
Check the video description for links! Or, jump straight to purchase this unit here:
amzn.to/4911O2m
And yes, I accidentally said CO2 detect a few times and not CO 😅😅😅 Seems I had CO2 on my mind. This gen has a carbon monoxide detector (CO). Forgive my sin!😬
just bought 2 257 each ...............I gave all the kids an inverter gen. had to resupply lol
Did yours have a co2 sensor
Great review and you are the ONLY one doing that signature tear-down to see build quality and who actually made the components, which is so important. The market continues to flood with these new off-brands, and even some new manufacturers... It's crazy. I used to look the other way with all Chinese off-brands, mostly due to concerns over parts availability, longevity/reliability and sound. The fact that most of these components can be sourced online as needed, is huge. And the parts are cheap. Sound levels were interesting. Long life is a question mark, but again, with cheap replacement parts for many components, that may not be a big deal either.
Nice video. Some things I thought I would mention:
1. The sensor on these is a CO (carbon monoxide), not a C02 (carbon dioxide) sensor. CO is a poisonous gas commonly associated with burning hydrocarbons. CO2 is a waste product you exhale when you breath among many other things. Both will kill you in high enough concentrations. But CO is what you have to be most careful about and thus what the sensor is primarily there to detect. My understanding is burning propane tends to emit a lot less CO than gasoline does. Especially as you can get indoor 'sate' propane heaters, it could never be safe to do this if the propane heater was releasing a lot of CO. Kind of funny to think about years ago I was ranting online about the idea of plugin hybrid electric trucks needing to be there and also act as generators and went on about how CO sensors would be crucial to this as people would be dumb and run trucks like this in their garage for emergency backup power and kill themselves. Now it is all the rage to have CO sensors on generators. Makes me wonder if people actually do read my commentary.
2. As we have talked about the Pulsar GX400BN in the recent past, something to point out that was missed in the review you made is it does have running time tracking. The button on the display toggles different things to see and total and current running time are things the manual says are in there. So while this generator definitely has its flaws, there are also some nice features in it not always found on generators.
3. Maybe a way to put generator run time into perspective for people you can use is to compare oil changes to what you do with your car engine, at least if you want your car engine to last a reasonable life. A way I have thought to put it is if you look at how you typically use a generator engine and try to shoe horn that into car engine usage, the recommended oil change interval of your car engine is ~100 hours of generator run time. However, your car engine has an oil filter. These little generators do not. Then with a new generator, you are getting into all of the crap that gets into the oil when you break in the engine. Then as you get into these compact generators, the RPMs go up. The Pulsar GD400BN for example has been clocked in at 4,850 RPM. Maybe getting into more of how often you really probably should be changing the oil on these generators and how much sustained load you really want to put on these generators could make for a good discussion.
Walmart's got the newer 2250 version for $257 right now. Tempted, but I already have an inverter generator haha. They're just so useful.
$280 on Walmart today….$360 normally. Just picked one up. Hard to say no to such a solid build quality at this price.
Crazy good deal!
247 now!
Nice video, I like your style 👍 very thorough!
Right on man! Checking out your channel too. Great info on that topbull voltage adjustment. Subscribed!
As always a very very good video and demo. Question, on the 2000w range suit case generators and after brake in, how many hours run time on average before oil change? (in warm to hot weather)
Much appreciated! Most small generators have an oil change schedule at 100 hours. After 3 changes, if things look good then I extend to 25 to 30 hours. What comes out of these little machines at 100 hours is pretty awful. From fuel dilution to general contamination... I rather service them at much tighter intervals.
i watched your youtube video on NEXPOW YH2200i... i ended up buying the unit at Walmart ($249)...i bought some of the amazon items you recommended for the unit...however, the oil change funnel is not available at Amazon anymore it seems...can you provide another source i can buy/get one at? Alex
Hey Alex, Here you go! amzn.to/4eYa86f
@@MR_Garage thanks...also, do you have a break in video for this unit or maybe a generic break in for all inverter generators
Dang it. Today, I just ordered the BiltHard 2k gas genny based on your great outcome of its review.
Now, it did come up shy of the 2k you expected. Think it topped out at 1940kw in your test I watched.
Just went online n saw Walmart has this Nexpow @$329 but w a coupon it offred $30 off. So about same as the BH I bought.
But i just ordered a hour meter, $12. The Nexpow has it bilt in. Ah well, they seem close enough for about same price.
Next, Im liking the Heomaito hmt3500 dual fuel. Online order only. Costco had the Firman dual fuel @$799. Hoping for a July4th sale for the easier return policy.
But the Heomaito sure looks good to me in your test.
Want next genny aprox 4kwh for propane use only.
I'll be watching ya for anymore surprises. AND, Howdy from Tx!
It will be fine but the nexpow is definitly a step up. Still the best overall budget gen I have found in this price range. And for sure, can't go wrong with the heomeito! They revved the PN to HMT4300iD now (same thing exactly). It just outperformed its labels with ease so their marketing capitalized on it.
Much appreciated! Stay tuned, always more to come!
Would it help to break in by running ten minutes, clear shavings from metallic dipstick (but no oil change), and repeat 2 or 3 times before the 1 hour oil change? When you drain the oil on first change, are you seeing shavings in the oil? In other words, is the metallic dipstick catching them all or just some percent of them?
I have never had enough material to warrant cleaning that often while breaking in.
Always aluminum stuff too which I call stripper dust. Looks like glitter. Obviously aluminum is not magnetic but also is less damaging. This gets flushed out with changes.
Can you do areview on a power smart 2500watts ?
I may have a few powersmart models inbound soon! Stay tuned.
Do you have the THD reading?
Good question, I do not at the moment. I have a new power harmonics analyzer being shipped to me next week and I will get those numbers at different loads. Looking at it in FFT and the waveform, I do not think it exceeded 5% even past 1800W. But, only testing will give the full story.
Excellent Sir!
Sadly mine burned oil from the start, amazon refunded my money so basically got a free generator. It works good, but i need to add some oil to it each day.
Bummer! But glad they did you right. What oil weight are you running?
@@MR_Garagewhat’s oil weight? Not sure I should buy one, it seems like I need a lot more knowledge and experience to ensure one runs well.
I run 15w40 in my generators. If you are in a very cold climate, you could go down to a 5 or 10w40. They are easy to maintain. Just change oil on the regular and keep it clean. Pretty much it.
@@MR_Garage Thanks for your response. I’m a city boy who recently moved down south so I experience more power outages. I’m still learning to be “handy.” I enjoyed how detailed your video is, I was going to buy on a whim but got nervous when I heard the words, spark plug, carburetor, etc. Began to wonder if I’m over my head, ha! I appreciate you and your authentic responses and video. 🙏🏼
How change oil
I show it in the video :)