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Why You Should Throw Your Generator in the Trash

Why You Should Throw Your Generator in the Trash

Caleb Cartwright by Caleb Cartwright
September 23, 2025
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Most preppers keep a generator tucked away as their ace in the hole. It’s the safety net, the one thing that makes them feel ready for the day the grid goes dark. On the surface, it makes sense: you lose power, you crank up the machine, and life goes on.

The truth is that the generator you bought as your “insurance policy” can easily turn into a death trap with your name on it, in a real collapse.

The cold, hard facts are simple: gas and diesel generators are noisy, fuel-hungry, short-lived, and dangerous. They offer a false sense of security while quietly putting a target on your back.

Noise

Picture this: It’s been three weeks since the lights went out. The initial chaos has settled into an eerie quiet. No hum of air conditioners, distant highway noise, or electronic buzz from streetlights. Just… silence.

Now imagine firing up your generator.

BRAAAAAAAP!

That sound basically shatters operational security for miles. In the dead calm of a post-collapse world, your generator’s roar carries like a gunshot. Every desperate soul within a mile radius now knows exactly where to find the guy with fuel, power, and probably food.

You might as well paint a bullseye on your front door.

Think about it tactically: In a world where people are killing over scraps, you just announced that you have abundance. How long before they come calling? And how many of them will there be?

Fuel Dependency

Here’s the math that generator salesmen don’t want you to do:

  • Your 5kW generator burns 18 gallons per day running 24/7
  • That’s 540 gallons per month
  • 540 gallons weighs over 3,200 pounds
  • Storage cost: $1,500+ just for the fuel
  • Fire hazard: Extreme

But here’s the real kicker: gasoline starts degrading in 3-6 months. Even with stabilizers, you’re looking at 1-2 years maximum. Diesel? Maybe 18-24 months if you’re lucky and store it perfectly.

So you’re betting your family’s survival on a fuel supply that’s literally rotting in storage, assuming you can even acquire and store hundreds of gallons without turning your property into a potential fireball.

When the trucks stop rolling and the pumps run dry, your generator becomes a very expensive, very heavy paperweight.

The Maintenance

Generators aren’t just fuel-hungry. They’re also mechanical prima donnas that break down at the worst possible moments.

Carburetor gummed up? You’re done. Spark plug fouled? You’re done. Oil pump fails? You’re done.

And good luck finding replacement parts when Amazon isn’t delivering and auto shops are boarded up.

Even if you’re mechanically inclined, generators require constant maintenance:

  • Oil changes every 50-100 hours
  • Spark plug replacement
  • Air filter cleaning
  • Fuel system maintenance
  • Carburetor adjustments

Miss any of these, and your “reliable” backup power becomes dead weight when you need it most.

Health Hazards

Generators don’t just make noise. They make poison.

Carbon monoxide (CO) is an invisible, odorless gas that kills quietly. One portable generator can produce as much CO in an hour as 450 cars. In the United States, over 770 people died in the last decade from generator-related CO poisoning, and thousands more were hospitalized.

Running a generator outside doesn’t make you safe. If it’s near a window, vent, or door, the gas can still seep inside. And running it indoors, in a garage, or even under a carport is a death sentence.

On top of CO, generators also bring risks of burns, electrocution, and fire. One spill while refueling, one spark in the wrong place, and your safe haven turns into a funeral pyre.

Smarter Alternatives That Actually Work

Throwing your generator in the trash doesn’t mean living in the dark. It means choosing systems that actually work in the long run—quiet, renewable, and low-tech solutions that won’t betray you when the grid is gone.

The “‘Navy SEAL” Solution

Imagine waking up after a grid-down disaster and realizing your lights still work, your fridge is cold, and your family isn’t stumbling in the dark. That’s actually possible now, all thanks to a breakthrough survival generator that’s both affordable and simple enough for anyone to use.

Unlike noisy gas generators that guzzle fuel you may not have, this system is designed for preppers who need reliable power without constant refueling. It can keep the average American home running for up to three days straight, providing energy for essentials like lights, communication devices, and refrigeration.

BIG

The full details are available in A Navy SEAL’s Bug-In Guide, by survival expert Joel Lambert. Click here and get one of the last physical copies available!

The Modular Backyard Power Plant

Instead of burning gallons of gas, The Modular Backyard Power Plant captures the sun’s free energy and turns it into reliable electricity. It’s designed with preppers in mind, not city slickers with deep pockets.

Safe to Run Anywhere: There is no toxic exhaust, risk of poisoning your family, and no roaring motor to give away your location.
Simple to Build: Even if you’ve never worked with electricity, you can put this together. It’s safer than changing a light bulb, and the instructions walk you through every step.
Maintenance-Free: Once you set it up, it just works. No oil changes, no carburetor cleaning, no tinkering. You place it where it gets sun, plug in your appliances, and let it do its job.

MPP banner

This is the kind of system you can count on for months or years, not just a few noisy hours.

Solar Kits

You don’t have to go all-in on a massive solar farm. Modular solar kits give you options.

Large systems can power freezers, fridges, lights, and tools, keeping your household running.

Smaller kits can charge radios, phones, flashlights, and even run atmospheric water generators.

Personally, I’ve been using solar panels to power the water systems I integrated into my homestead.

H2O deviceThe Water Freedom System, my go-to solution for bugging in, uses a simple solar panel to pull moisture straight out of the air and turn it into clean, drinkable water.

The good news is, you don’t need a massive or expensive solar array to make it work.

Right here, you can find all the details on the exact type of solar panel you’ll need (trust me—it’s cheap and simple to set up), along with the other components that allow the system to generate 20–30 gallons of water every single day.

The same principle powers my favorite portable generator, which I also built at home using the step-by-step plans available on this page.

From the start, it’s important to point out that this is a backpack-sized water generator. That means it’s compact, lightweight, and easy to carry wherever you go. Naturally, the solar panel it requires is also small and portable.

Here is the full plan, based on the very same techniques the U.S. military has used for years on dry, hostile battlefields across the world.

banner JW army

Every watt of solar power you generate means one less drop of gasoline you’ll ever need.

Rocket Stoves

For cooking, a rocket stove is unbeatable. It burns twigs, branches, or scrap wood with incredible efficiency. The design creates a hot, clean burn with very little smoke, which helps you stay hidden.

They’re cheap to make, nearly indestructible, and they’ll keep working long after every gas can is empty.

No-Electricity Alternatives – The Amish Were Right

Sometimes the smartest option isn’t replacing electricity—it’s learning to live without it. For over 300 years, Amish communities have thrived without generators, without grid power, without the mechanical dependencies that make modern life so fragile.

They use:

  1. No-Electricity AC Units, Washing Machines and Fridges
  2. Root cellars for refrigeration
  3. Hand tools for work
  4. Gravity-fed water systems
  5. Wood for heat and cooking
  6. Oil lamps for light

By integrating just a few of these methods, you can stretch your resources, reduce your risk, and free yourself from total dependence on fragile technology.

>> Get The Amish Ways Book (Coupon Number X43LC2V Can Only Be Used Today!) <<

Final Thoughts

If the power goes out for a night or two, a generator might help you get by. But when the grid collapses for good, that machine becomes a liability.

Noise, fuel, fumes, and fragility make it a trap—not a plan.

Real survival means cutting the cord on false security and investing in systems that actually last. A Modular Backyard Power Plant, solar kits, rocket stoves, and no-electricity alternatives aren’t just backups—they’re the foundation of true resilience.

Because when the lights never come back on, the last thing you want is to depend on a machine that makes you a target, burns through your supplies, and poisons the air around you.

Throw the generator in the trash. Your survival depends on it.


Whether you stick with a traditional generator or move to alternative options, you can’t ignore the threat of an EMP. Every system is vulnerable unless you take steps to shield it. The good news is, you can protect your most valuable electronics with the right methods. You can find everything you need to keep your gear safe when an EMP hits if you click RIGHT HERE.

You may also like:

These U.S. States Will Collapse Post-EMP. Is Yours On The List? EMPC

I Lived Without Electricity For A Week. Here’s What Happened

This Smart Box Cuts Your Power Bills By 65% (Video)

6 Ingenious Projects for Endless Hot Water Without Electricity

25+ Ways To Keep Food Cold Without Electricity

How To Charge Your Phone When There Is No Electricity

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Comments 1

  1. geezer says:
    1 second ago

    we live in the deep south. we keep ours because of hurricanes. we also have a fully tested 3 kw solar system in the can that we can fall back on for long term power.

    Did you like this comment?
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