Fred,
I have a Honda2000 and am very happy with it indeed. I suspect that a Honda1000 would do the jobs I need nearly as well, but with less convenience.
The only time I overload the 2000 is if I thoughtlessly attempt to run the microwave (700 watts) and the toaster (1000 watts) in the morning. The "real" limit on the 2000 is essentially 1600 watts, so I assume the 1000 sustained capacity would be more like 800 watts. The 1000 could be problematical.
My ultimate scheme is to use the generator only in the mornings. It's a bit of a hassle to set it up (the 1000 would be no different) with fueling, starting, laying out the power cord, etc; so I only want to do it once a day. Mornings are perfect since on
Tosca things are very laid back in the mornings :wink:. We putz around and generally have all the time in the world in the mornings. We usually don't get underway until noon or so. Also, I must, and I mean
MUST, re-heat my coffee 10 times in the morning (I drink it slowly). So that means using the microwave which pretty much requires a generator. So I'm running the generator anyway in the morning. I just installed a 35amp charger so that I can bring the batteries up (after the fridge being on all night) in an hour+. The charger takes about 500 watts, so a Honda1000 would only leave me 300 watts for other things......not enough. The simplest thing is to simply add up the wattage of what you do, when. That should dictate whether you need a 1000 or a 2000.
I have no experience with solar panels, but I would guess that the big consideration there would be how fast you need your amps. If you have a big enough battery bank so you can go a long time without charging; then the noiseless, hassle-free convenience of solar couldn't be beat. But if you need, as I do, a bunch of amps all at once -- such as in my morning ritual -- then solar isn't going to cut it. I have an inverter on board, but I rarely use it anymore since I learned the hard way how many amps get sucked from your batteries with that 10:1 voltage step-up. Take the microwave alone.....when it is running, albeit it don't often run long, it sucks 60 amps -- that's my full battery capacity (to 50% SOC) in an hour. Solar would require you to put such loads on your battery bank if you use 120v AC for much at all.
Lastly, I think the solar/generator decision might depend largely on one's cruising style. If one stays mostly in marinas with shore power, that would lean you toward solar; but we love to hang on an anchor in small, ignored coves. I do lots of things to avoid having to go to a marina

-- the Honda2000 is just one of them.