Full Product Manual
You will want a generator that can run the largest appliances and motors you will 
need during an outage. You can always run other smaller loads/appliances by 
rotating them on and off as necessary. 
For example, if you have a generator with 9600 continuous watts of capacity, during 
a power outage, you can run the hot water heater (typically 4800 watts) by simply 
turning off the majority of other household breakers until the water tank heats up. 
Once the water is heated, shut off the water heater breaker and switch the other 
household circuit breakers back on. 
To determine the loads you can support with a portable generator, you must consider 
both the “running watt” and the “starting watt” requirements of the loads you want to 
operate. (See Appliance Energy Guide in this manual) 
You can 
purchase or 
use a 
generator 
of any  size 
provided 
the 
generator 
is 
equipped  with  a 4 
w
i
r
e,
 120/240-volt 
r
ece
p
t
a
c
l
e
rated 
at  20-amps, 
30-
a
m
p
s 
and/or 
50-amps.  GenerLink is designed to be compatible with 20-amp, 30-amp 
and 50-amp connectors. GenerLink is not rated to be compatible with larger current 
outputs and will electronically disconnect if you are generating outputs larger than 
40-amps. 










