Emergency
During a power outage, homeowners and businesses make use of an Emergency Generator to keep the lights on and critical appliances working. The generator usually powers only the most critical circuits and necessities.
Emergency Generator
Homeowners and businesses make use of portable emergency generator to keep the lights on and critical appliances working. The generator usually powers only the most important circuits necessary.
Need Power in an outage? Most people do. Refrigerators and freezers gradually get warm. Sump pumps stop working. Medical equipment* doesn’t do its job. Home Wi-Fi shuts down. An Emergency Generator provides power for all the critical and essential appliances necessary to keep a home or small business safe.
When the power goes out, many small businesses can’t do business. A small office or retail location can keep their doors open with an Emergency Power Generator. It takes a few minutes to set up, but once the generator is running, small appliances and lights have power. It could mean the difference between keeping customers or letting them walk away to obtain goods and services somewhere else.
Selecting an Emergency Power Generator
Choose an emergency power generator that exceeds your current needs by about 15 to 25 percent. Operating a generator at 100 percent capacity shortens its life while limiting the load to 75 percent capacity for most of the run time extends generator life. Owners encounter fewer breakdowns and enjoy better fuel economy.
Follow the Power Expert Sizing Guides for advice and tips about choosing a generator. A portable emergency generator keeps the lights on and essentials powered in homes and small businesses.
Emergency Power Generator for Home
If you need the furnace or air conditioning to run, invest in a manual transfer switch. During installation, choose the most important circuits to power like A/C, furnace, refrigerator, freezer, microwave, lights, and Wi-Fi. When a power outage hits, start the generator in a safe place. Connect the generator cord to the inlet box and turn on the generator main breaker. At the manual transfer switch, turn off all the breakers before switching to generator power. Starting with the heaviest load (usually air conditioning,) turn on the breakers one at a time.
Now your emergency generator can supply power to your most important circuits.
*Portable Emergency Generators are NOT suitable for life support functions.
Featured Emergency Generators at Norwall
These are some of the most popular Emergency generator models at Norwall.
DuroMax 9000 Watt Inverter Generator | Dual Fuel—Remote Start—7600 Running Watts—68 dBA Quiet—4 Solid Wheels |
Cummins 9500 Watt Generator | Dual Fuel–Remote Electric Start—7500 Running Watts—EPA, CARB, USFS Compliant |
Cummins 4500 Watt Inverter Generator | Remote Start–Low 52 dBA Noise–Excellent Fuel Economy: one tank runs 18 hours |
Westinghouse 12000 Watt Generator | Remote Start–EPA, CARB emissions–16 hr run on 10 gallons–Transfer Switch Ready |
Champion 8000 Watt Tri-Fuel Generator | Gas–LP–NG; Electric Start–CO Shield–EPA, CARB certified–up to 8000 Running Watts. |
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Model #: WGen9500DFc
Westinghouse 9500 Watt Dual Fuel Generator with Automatic Carbon Monoxide Shutdown | WGen9500DFc
Norwall's Low Price
$1,249.00 -
Model #: WGen20000c
Westinghouse 20000 Watt Generator Remote Start with Automatic Carbon Monoxide Shutoff | WGen20000c
Norwall's Low Price
$3,799.00 -
Model #: XP7000iH
DuroMax 7000 Watt Inverter Generator Pushbutton Start + Dual Fuel with CO Alert | XP7000iH
Norwall's Low Price
$1,799.00 -
Model #: 7686
Generac GP8000E Electric Start Portable Generator | 7686
Norwall's Low Price
$1,099.00 -
Model #: 6864
Generac XD5000 Diesel Electric Start Portable Generator | 6864
Norwall's Low Price
$4,019.00 -
Model #: WGen12000c
Westinghouse 12000 Watt Generator with Automatic Carbon Monoxide Shutoff | WGen12000c
Norwall's Low Price
$2,999.00 -
Model #: WGen12000DFc
Westinghouse 12000 Watt Dual Fuel Generator with Automatic Carbon Monoxide Shutoff | WGen12000DFc
Norwall's Low Price
$3,099.00 -
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During a power outage, homeowners and businesses make use of an Emergency Generator to keep the lights on and critical appliances working. The generator usually powers only the most critical circuits and necessities.
Emergency Generator
Homeowners and businesses make use of portable emergency generator to keep the lights on and critical appliances working. The generator usually powers only the most important circuits necessary.
Need Power in an outage? Most people do. Refrigerators and freezers gradually get warm. Sump pumps stop working. Medical equipment* doesn’t do its job. Home Wi-Fi shuts down. An Emergency Generator provides power for all the critical and essential appliances necessary to keep a home or small business safe.
When the power goes out, many small businesses can’t do business. A small office or retail location can keep their doors open with an Emergency Power Generator. It takes a few minutes to set up, but once the generator is running, small appliances and lights have power. It could mean the difference between keeping customers or letting them walk away to obtain goods and services somewhere else.
Selecting an Emergency Power Generator
Choose an emergency power generator that exceeds your current needs by about 15 to 25 percent. Operating a generator at 100 percent capacity shortens its life while limiting the load to 75 percent capacity for most of the run time extends generator life. Owners encounter fewer breakdowns and enjoy better fuel economy.
Follow the Power Expert Sizing Guides for advice and tips about choosing a generator. A portable emergency generator keeps the lights on and essentials powered in homes and small businesses.
Emergency Power Generator for Home
If you need the furnace or air conditioning to run, invest in a manual transfer switch. During installation, choose the most important circuits to power like A/C, furnace, refrigerator, freezer, microwave, lights, and Wi-Fi. When a power outage hits, start the generator in a safe place. Connect the generator cord to the inlet box and turn on the generator main breaker. At the manual transfer switch, turn off all the breakers before switching to generator power. Starting with the heaviest load (usually air conditioning,) turn on the breakers one at a time.
Now your emergency generator can supply power to your most important circuits.
*Portable Emergency Generators are NOT suitable for life support functions.
Featured Emergency Generators at Norwall
These are some of the most popular Emergency generator models at Norwall.
DuroMax 9000 Watt Inverter Generator | Dual Fuel—Remote Start—7600 Running Watts—68 dBA Quiet—4 Solid Wheels |
Cummins 9500 Watt Generator | Dual Fuel–Remote Electric Start—7500 Running Watts—EPA, CARB, USFS Compliant |
Cummins 4500 Watt Inverter Generator | Remote Start–Low 52 dBA Noise–Excellent Fuel Economy: one tank runs 18 hours |
Westinghouse 12000 Watt Generator | Remote Start–EPA, CARB emissions–16 hr run on 10 gallons–Transfer Switch Ready |
Champion 8000 Watt Tri-Fuel Generator | Gas–LP–NG; Electric Start–CO Shield–EPA, CARB certified–up to 8000 Running Watts. |