Thanks for that info, I looked at the Chicken Hawk web site and found that the front warmer uses 550W and the rear warmer uses 600W. Mathimatically the Yamahabeechkingd;42566 wrote: I would check the actual power draw of your warmers from their manufacturer. Some of them draw up to 1200 watts which would over load that genset.
1000W is too small for one set, look into something a tad bigger.Snow;42588 wrote: Thanks for that info, I looked at the Chicken Hawk web site and found that the front warmer uses 550W and the rear warmer uses 600W. Mathimatically the Yamaha
EF1000iS is to small for the job, but is anyone out there useing this generator with no problems, if so let me know.
That’s what I was afraid of. Let me ask you guys this; I wanted an inverter generator for the cleaner power supply to the warmers. I was worried that using a standard generator could possible damage warmers due to the inconsistent electrical wave pattern that is produced by none inverter generators. Has anyone ever heard of this problem, or had this problem?dmb367;42595 wrote: 1000W is too small for one set, look into something a tad bigger.
Thanks for that info, No I don't have the EF1000iS but was interested in buying that unit. I do how ever have a standard gen. but just don't like all that noise. If you have that unit and have had no problems I may look into it further. One question, do your warmers warm to full temp?RICKYROADRACER;42629 wrote: Snow I use the EF 1000iS with digit Chicken Warmers, I've had no problems, yes bigger is better in this case but if you have that unit it will be fine.