Pramac P7500i
Take stable portable power wherever it is needed with the Pramac P7500i. With 7.5 kVA maximum and 6.0 kW continuous output, it has useful capacity for everyday tools, appliances, electronics and mobile-work loads without stepping up to a larger stationary set. Its inverter-based output is suited to equipment that benefits from clean, controlled power, while the portable format works well for backup, camping, service vehicles and remote jobs. The electric starting arrangement keeps operation simple for the intended use. CPS can help confirm the load, expected runtime, charging options, accessories and delivery before you buy.
Download Specification Sheet→- 7.0 kVA output class (6.0 kW continuous/prime where published)
- Petrol engine
- Inverter voltage control
- Electric starting system
Industry-leading components, fully supported in Australia

Pramac
Pramac is a leading global manufacturer of stationary and mobile power generation equipment, founded in Casole d'Elsa, Tuscany in 1966. Now part of the Generac group, Pramac engineers diesel, petrol and battery energy storage solutions trusted by rental houses, mining sites and emergency services in over 150 countries.
- Model
- Pramac P7500i
- Prime Power RPR
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Emergency Stand-By Power ESP
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Voltage
- 230 V
- Phase
- Single-phase
- Frequency
- 50 Hz
- Power factor
- 1.0
- Fuel
- Petrol
- Fuel Tank Size
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Run time @ 75% Load
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Fuel consumption
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Emission Level
- TBC — refer to datasheet
- Configuration
- Compact inverter chassis
- Dimensions (L × W × H)
- 805 × 600 × 760 mm
- Rated capacity (LTP)
- 7.5 kVA
- Continuous power (COP)
- 6.0 kW (real)
- Starting system
- Electric
- Dry weight
- 110 kg
- Model code
- P7500i
- Product type
- portable inverter generator
- Output class
- 7.0 kVA
- Prime / PRP output
- 6.0 kW
- Voltage regulation
- Inverter
- Application
- home standby, small business and essential-circuit backup
Learn more — Generator School
All guides →
Almost every conversation about generator sizing starts with two numbers: kVA and kW. They sound similar, they're closely related, and they're almost always mis-used. The beer-glass analogy below is the fastest way to get them straight in your head — and once you do, every spec sheet in the catalogue suddenly makes sense.

A generator is really three machines bolted together: an engine, an alternator, and a controller. They each do one job, and they all have to talk to each other for the unit to behave properly.

Almost every customer who asks us 'should I get diesel or petrol?' gets the same answer: it depends on the duty. For occasional camp / weekend use under 8 kVA, petrol is cheaper to buy and lighter to move. For anything that has to start reliably after sitting unused — backup, standby, prime-power — diesel wins, almost always.

