These are great baseline data.
To the point that I think
@nextalcupfan's images make, is what the generator is connected to can have a significant impact.
At the end of the day, it is the whole system, generator, wiring, load, that work together or not to give the final power quality under use. A generator by itself, or driving a load bank of resistive load is a baseline for THD in my book. Depending on the wiring and devices making up the power quality may be worse (e.g bad brushed fan motor), or better (due to EMI reducing equipment and circuits). I have seen both. Sometimes the judicious application of EMI filters on noisy equipment can make a big difference to the power quality of the whole system. But it isn't the grid with large numbers of loads averaging out the noise, together with large numbers of transformers, and phase compensators to keep the power quality and impedance within tight limits.
Some of the screamer generators can put out significantly better power with a some adjustment, and perhaps the addition of some EMI snubbers, but many have cheap, in all senses of the word, voltage regulation systems that don't keep tight limits on voltage, harmonics, or response to load changes. In my book, it depends on what you need the power for. 120V to run a $40 electric polesaw in the back 40, pretty much anything will do.
If you really, really need clean power, I think inverters are good, and so is an oversized isolation transformer. $$$
Horses for courses.
All the best,
2Pbfeet