A Way to Quiet Down a Generator That Really Works

generator

In the aftermath of a tornado early this year, our area had a black-out for about three days until the DWP could get everything functioning again. It was not an easy time but we made do and actually enjoyed the quiet in the neighborhood – for a day.

As it turned out we had a neighbor, about three houses down the road, that had his own gasoline powered generator. He never had it up for long but, around three times a day, he did power her up and the entire street knew it. While we have to commend his forward thinking, prepping for a blackout, we could not get past one annoying fact: It was loud!

This got us to thinking about a SHTF situation and bugging out. We cannot imagine how long he and his family would last during a chaotic situation if undesirables knew what it was they were hearing and came after it.

There has to be a way of quieting down that generator – and there is! Go on over to the next page and discover what he and other can do. It really works!


Start Slideshow


6 Comments

  1. Bruce A Bruce said:

    How does this keep propagating? Most of the noise is mechanical from the generator, not the motor. Either buy a quiet genset it build a soundproof shed for the one you have.

  2. Ben Richardson said:

    It’s a bogus article anyway. It’s not the engine, typically, that is making all the noise. It’s the harmonics from the rotating generator head. We’ve tried everything at the deer lease and the only thing that changed was buying a “quiet” generator.

*

*

Top