Dear WeatherCat faithful,
Here in California we are rushing (like it or not) towards
"Public Safety Power Shutoff" season. Having suffered from the insult and injury of having your power deliberately cut off, we purchased a portable generator back in October 2019 as you may remember:

Shortly afterward, this generator mysteriously would stop producing electricity. At first I thought it was some sort of grounding issue and each time, simply restarting the generator got the electricity flowing once more. Alas, after 4 hours of the latest Public Safety Power Shutoff of last fall, once more the generator quit and I couldn't it to work even after several attempts.
Of course eventually the darn thing did start working, but only after the utility restored our power. While the generator was still under warranty, I wasn't feeling good about this situation. For starters, the failure was intermittent. The repair shop might not be able to see the failure and thus would refuse to make any repairs. Even if they did make some sort of repairs, that would leave me with effectively a "refurbished generator." That's not the sort of reliability I had in mind.
The final straws were two-fold. Champion discontinued this model - hardly a glowing endorsement. Worse, Consumer Reports that once recommended Champion products also dropped all their recommendations. It was time for a change.
However, I wasn't going to find getting a new portable generator as easy as I had hoped. Thanks to COVID, the RV industry got a surge in interest and RV sales jump up 51%! Of course, RV parks and campground didn't increase their capacity by 51% so there were many more people looking for sites to take their RV. This in turn caused my RV owners to becoming interested in (as the RV slang goes:)
"boondocking" (operating your RV away from hookups like electricity.)
RVs can cope without a good many things, but electricity is hard to leave without. That's where portable generators suddenly come back into the picture. A major niche in the generator market is to power RVs off the grid. So when I started to search for a portable generator - I couldn't find any!!

Lucky me, there is a class of portable generators that aren't easy to use for RV power: construction/job-site generators. I finally settled on the Honda EB2800 generator:
https://powerequipment.honda.com/generators/models/eb2800iAs it comes out of the box, it just has a frame that rests on four rubber feet:

Apparently, some of these generators are installed in a quasi-permanent setup at a construction site. If you want some sort of a wheeled cart you need to buy it as an extra and assemble it for yourself:

You can also buy a nicely made cover that allows you to move the generator while still covered:

These small engines have the same sort of break-in procedure. You need to run them 5 hours before changing the oil the first time. Since during a "Public Safety Power Shutoff," you would want to run the generator at least 8-10 hours, that would require you to change the oil without power - not something I wanted to do. Instead, I made two test runs of a few hours to make sure all the appliances were getting enough electricity and after that I changed the oil. Here is a photo of the generator in operation:

The new Honda generator worked flawlessly and the only annoyance is that changing the oil is a messy procedure.
So if I have been a bit scarce on the WeatherCat forum, it is because I had some other pressing obligations that needed to be resolved ASAP. Now that we have a replacement generator, should we suffer yet another "Public Safety Power Shutoff" . . . . . .at least we'll be ready for it!
Cheers, Edouard