Will Generators Work After an EMP?
Some might, most won’t. Old-school diesel and petrol generators could still crank to life, but modern inverter units are much more fragile. Keep reading to learn what happens to generators during an EMP, how to protect them, and which gear is most likely to keep the lights on.
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Generator Risks During an EMP
An electromagnetic pulse (EMP) is like an invisible lightning strike on steroids. It can fry delicate circuits in seconds—sometimes even if devices are unplugged.
How EMPs Damage Generators and Electronics
EMPs come from solar storms or human-made sources, but the effect is the same: overloaded circuits and dead systems. For Aussies relying on backup power during storms, bushfires, or outages, knowing what’s at risk is critical for all types of power generators.
Will an EMP Destroy Electronics That Are Unplugged?
Unplugging helps with lightning but not with an EMP. Energy can be induced directly into the device—meaning a generator controller stored in a shed can still fail. Only shielding, like a Faraday cage or EMP bag, provides real protection for portable generators.
Will an EMP Destroy Batteries?
Batteries themselves usually survive—they’re just chemical storage. But modern portable power stations contain fragile electronics that can fail instantly during a pulse. Without the BMS, the battery becomes far less useful.
Protecting Generators from EMP Damage
Not all generators face the same risk. Older diesel generators or petrol models with minimal electronics are tougher, while modern inverter generators are highly vulnerable.
How to Protect a Generator from an EMP
Three things matter most: simplicity, shielding, and distance. The fewer circuits, the safer. Shielding can be done with a DIY Faraday cage or a commercial EMP shield for generators for home use.
How to Build a Faraday Cage for a Generator
A Faraday cage acts like armour, redirecting energy around the device. For small generators, a galvanised bin lined with cardboard works. Larger setups might involve reinforcing sheds with mesh or wire. The principle is the same: keep the pulse out.
The Role of an EMP Shield
EMP shields attach directly to your generator or wiring, clamping surges before they fry sensitive parts. Think of them as surge protectors for extreme events. They’re not perfect but provide another layer of defence for electrical generators.
Generator Alternatives and Extra Protection
Generators aren’t the only concern—solar systems and smaller essentials can also be vulnerable.
Will Solar Panels Work After an EMP?
Solar panels themselves usually survive, but the electronics—charge controllers and inverters—often fail. Keeping spares in a Faraday cage means you can swap them out and bring your system back online after the event. A portable solar power generator is a great backup to store in a shielded environment.
Using Faraday Bags for Small Essentials
Faraday bags block EMPs and work well for radios, phones, USB drives, and spare generator parts. They’re cheap, portable, and easy to store at home. You can even use them to protect a battery pack with inverter.
Conclusion: Generator EMP Protection
So, will generators work after an EMP? Some will, most won’t. Old-school mechanical models might keep going, but modern inverter types are fragile. Consider the price of generators that are built with fewer electronic dependencies for maximum resilience.
Preparation makes all the difference. With Faraday cages, EMP shields, or even a few EMP-proof bags, Aussies can safeguard their backup power and avoid being left in the dark. If you're looking for new equipment, check out the generators for sale to find a model that fits your emergency preparedness plan.
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Here's exactly how we size them
Two numbers decide everything — get these right and you'll never buy the wrong generator.
1. kVA = how much it can run at once
Add up the watts of everything you'll run at the same time — that's your minimum. Then multiply by 1.25 to leave headroom for start-up surge. A 2,000W load needs at least a 2.5kVA generator. Always size up, never down.
2. Surge watts = the hidden catch
Motors (fridges, air conditioners, compressors) spike hard on start-up — often 2–3x their running watts. A caravan aircon that runs at 1,000W can pull 2,500W+ for the first second. Check the surge rating, not just continuous output.
Inverter generators produce clean, stable power — safe for laptops, CPAPs, TVs and any modern electronics. They're also significantly quieter. Open-frame generators are louder and produce slightly less stable power, but they're cheaper per kVA and perfectly fine for power tools, lights, and anything that isn't electronics-sensitive. The Welling & Crossley Smart Silent range sits in between — enclosed inverter design, very quiet, high kVA output, and priced well.
If you're camping for a few nights and mainly running a fridge, CPAP and charging gear, a portable power station is often the better pick — no fuel, no fumes, near-silent, and you can top it up with solar panels. Generators shine when you need continuous high-output power for tools, aircon over multiple days, or remote properties where mains power isn't available. Not sure? Call us and we'll help you work it out. Or try our Power Station Finder here.
Runtime is quoted at a specific load — usually 25% or 50% of rated output. Running at full capacity burns significantly more fuel and cuts runtime. The Welling & Crossley 6000W quotes 7 hours at 50% load — at full tilt, expect closer to 4. Always check the tank size and carry spare fuel if you're heading remote.
What your gear actually draws
Rough figures. Add up everything running at once to get your minimum kVA — then size up for surge headroom.
| What you're running | Running watts | Surge / start-up |
|---|---|---|
| Phone & laptop charging | ~100W | Minimal |
| Camp lights / LED strip | ~50W | Minimal |
| 12V fridge / freezer | 60–150W | Up to 600W |
| Caravan reverse-cycle aircon | 1,000–1,500W | 2,000–3,000W |
| Circular saw / angle grinder | 1,200–2,000W | 2,500–4,000W |
| Drill / impact driver | 600–900W | 1,200–1,800W |
| Microwave | 1,000–1,200W | Minimal |
| Kettle | 1,500–2,400W | Minimal |
| Air compressor (small) | 1,500–2,000W | 3,000–5,000W |
| Welder (MIG/stick) | 3,000–6,000W | Varies |
| Full home (non-AC essentials) | 3,000–5,000W | 5,000–8,000W |
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Common questions
For camping with a 12V fridge, lights and charging, a 2.5–3.2kVA inverter generator does the job. If you're running caravan reverse-cycle aircon, step up to at least 4.5kVA — aircon units surge hard on start-up. An inverter generator keeps things quiet around the campsite.
kVA (kilovolt-amperes) is the total apparent power the generator can produce. kW (kilowatts) is the real usable power after accounting for the power factor (typically 0.8). A 2.5kVA generator delivers around 2kW of usable power. For most home and camping use, kVA is the number to focus on — just make sure your total load stays comfortably under it.
No. Generators produce carbon monoxide and must only be run outdoors or in well-ventilated areas, away from doors and windows. Never run one inside a caravan, shed, or garage — CO poisoning is odourless and can be fatal. Keep at least 3 metres from any opening.
It depends on tank size and load. The Welling & Crossley 6000W has an 18L tank and runs around 7 hours at 50% load. The Gentech 8kVA has a 25L tank. Always carry spare fuel jerry cans if you're heading remote.
Yes. Inverter generators produce clean sine wave power — same as your wall socket — which is safe for laptops, TVs, CPAPs and modern electronics. Open-frame generators produce slightly less stable power, which is fine for tools and lighting but we'd recommend an inverter if you're running anything sensitive.
Warranty varies by brand. Welling & Crossley and Westinghouse come with a 2-year warranty. Gentech units with Honda engines carry up to a 5-year warranty option. Champion units carry a 3-year limited warranty. All are backed by Australian-based support. Call us if you have warranty questions on a specific model.
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