Best Magna 3000 (2600 Watt) Portable Inverter Generator - New 2011 4th generation, Quite, Lightweight, Portable review for shop onlineBy : Magna ![]() ![]() ![]() Price : Please check price In Stock You are looking at the all new 2011 4th generation variable engine speed Magna 3000 Watt digital inverter generator in attractive red color. It is very similar to Honda EU2000i but with more power. It is light weight, quiet, and portable. It has a built-in 30 AMP (TT-30R) standard RV receptacle. You don't need any adapter or loss of power for RV connection. It is brand new in box and in stock ready to ship. It is also the most powerful portable inverter generator and with pure sinewave output. This generator is save for sensitive electronics like personal computer and communications devices.Magna generators are state-of-the-art power generators. They are small, efficient and quiet operation, these generators will run longer and cost you less while providing the best power output in the industry. It had been selling in Europe and Asia for a while in the 220V market. It has the extra wattage to power some of the newer ultra efficient RV AC, it is the best portable generator on the market for 5th wheels and travel trailers. Tested on smaller 18' to 24' RV's - We ran some tests on 5th wheels and travel trailers. This Magna 3000 Watt can handle most of the newer 13,500 BTU rooftop RV AC units. This 2nd generation has more reserve power to start the RV air conditioner without overload. Most RV AC need 4000 Watts for 2 seconds at cool start and this Magna 3000 can handle it. Rated frequency (Hz) 60, Rated voltage (V) 120 only, Rated current (A) 22.5, Rated speed 900 RPM to 5000 RPM, Rated output power 2,500 Watts, Max output power 2,600 Watts (The same model was previously rated 3,000 Watt, it is the same generator but Manga just want to account for the wattage drop when the generator getting hot). DC output, 12V-8.3 A (charging cable included), Electric circuit breaker, Fuel tank capacity 1.75 gallonsVariable engine speed with Econo Throttle (can switch off),Engine Displacement (cc) - high quality 150 cc EPA certified engine1 year warranty
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Magna 3000 (2600 Watt) Portable Inverter Generator Video Clips. Duration : 0.77 Mins.
History of Credit Very Interesting
"Do you suppose it might be possible to have a sufficient number of consumers declare bankruptcy that the entire economy might implode upon itself?" Does history repeat itself? I suspect it does. It may take on a different appearance but its essence often times does come full circle. Let me illustrate with a mini history of credit and money.Though credit was first used in Assyria, Babylon and Egypt 3000 years ago, an article at Newsweek MSNBC, suggests that early civilizations had far higher interest rates and crueler punishments for failing to repay loans than we have today.
It seems that in Athens for example, enslaving debtors was common practice but was eventually seen as impractical as the farming class all fell into debtor's slavery. The outcome was no crops grown resulting in no one having anything left to eat. The Babylonians' Code of Hammurabi set rates at 33 percent but the Roman Emperor Constantine set a much lower rate at 12.5 percent. Then the Church went on a crusade against usury (meanwhile selling "forgiveness" in the form of plenary indulgences to those with money to pay for it.) Regardless, the Magna Carta placed limits on interest in 1215.
With Christians restricted by usury laws, it fell to the Jews to act as the primary money-lenders in Europe. The resulting stereotype of Jews was immortalized in Shakespeare's play "The Merchant of Venice." Anti-Semitism during this period was rampant: England's Edward I forbade Jews to exact usury. What a shame Anti-Semitism never ended. The first advertisement for credit, was placed in 1730 by Christopher Thornton, who offered furniture that could be paid off weekly. But In 1752 Britain tried to forbid the New England colonies from issuing bills of credit. Ironically, colonists ended up financing the revolution with the same bills that Britain so despised... along with a flood of hyperinflationary paper money. But use of a form of credit continued. From the 18th to 20th century "tallymen" sold clothes in return for small weekly payments. They were called "tallymen" because they kept a record or tally of what people had bought.
According to Newsweek MSNBC, "President Andrew Jackson crusaded against the National Bank in the 1820s, seeing it as an elitist vehicle for corruption. After the Civil War, the whole country felt shaky about using paper money as legal tender instead of notes backed by gold or silver. It took 30 years to settle on our current currency. But concerning credit, the Federal Reserve Bank implemented a policy of 'easy credit' in the 1920s that prolonged the boom years but also heightened the crash of 1929. And in 1950, when the first Diner's Club charge card was issued to 200 friends for use at 14 restaurants in New York, the credit card issuer had no idea that 45 years later, more than 90 percent of all U.S. transactions would be done electronically. He just figured it would be an easy way to avoid embarrassment when he was short of cash. So in 1950 Diners Club began and was immediately followed by American Express in 1951.
The magnetic strip was introduced in 1970 and ushered in the information age and the credit card industry boom which has driven this economy now for decades. Though we don't have a debtor's prison as in the days of Babylonia, nor is usury lawful (though a good argument might be presented that it is from time to time), we do seem to have come full circle. Remember all those farmers back 3000 years ago who went to prison and could not grow thereby starving there countryman? Well, what do you suppose drives our economy? It's credit. And what horrible condition continues to rise in epidemic proportions as a result? It's bankruptcy.
Per an article Can You Afford It?, the national balance on credit cards, auto, and other non-mortgage loans rose to a new record figure in April 2001 at .58 trillion. Delinquent credit card payments (30 days past due) has risen to new high of 5% delinquency. Standard and Poors reports that the credit card industry wrote off 6.7% of balances as un-collectable which is the highest in years. There is a 17.5% increase in the already staggering number of bankruptcies filed. The credit card has been the single major pivot in creating a boom in bankruptcies. Do you suppose it might be possible to have enough consumers declare bankruptcy so that the entire economy might implode upon itself? It did with the farmers in early civilizations. I would say it is very possible when your castle is built of plastic.
Regis Sauger
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Magna 3000 (2600 Watt) Portable Inverter Generator - New 2011 4th generation, Quite, Lightweight, Portable

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