If you read reviews on these products you'll think that they're all junk. I was researching one for my house and decided on a portable instead.
One has to take reviews with a grain of salt. For one thing, people are far more likely to write a bad review than a good one. Just human nature.
But really, most of the people writing the reviews are not technically competent to understand much about generators anyway so why would their comments matter any as far as the technical issues go. As far as their impressions of the installers and dealers of them, that is just normal business kind of thing and I take that more seriously.
Although I also find it ironic that you can see reviews for the same dealer that make it look like he is the devil incarnate and others that make him look angelic. Just hard to make sense of reviews sometimes.
Personally, I think for a backup generator that will likely run more in test mode than actually being used in a power down situation, I think the reality is that most of the name brand gensets are quite adequate.
Every time I have a power outage I think about getting a generator. A few years back I was getting them 3 or 4 times a year, often for extended periods of time. That went away after the buried the power lines that used to run down the middle of my street, so the urgency has left me.
I still from time to time think it might be a good idea but I just can't see spending the money on something that will get such limited use.
However, I am considering getting a small generator for camping and maybe I will just install a pass through plug from out back into the house so I can use it if needed. I think I could keep the furnace, refrigerator, and hot water heater going if the power was out. Maybe not all three at the same time but I have plenty of extension cords and the hot water heater is only needed for a half hour or so before I shower, and the furnace only needs to run a few hours a day to keep the house warm "enough". The frig only runs a few hours a day anyway.
I have been looking at either the $80 HF generator or a small sine wave inverter unit. The HF inverter version is 2kW and often sells for $400-450 and has a lot of supporters. The honda version is almost twice the price. But both are quite heavy by comparison with the smaller HF generator making it less desirable for camping purposes.