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On Fri, 2011-11-04 at 06:33 -0400, Bill Horne wrote:
It started on Saturday night, with a finger-poke and my wife saying "Bill, the power is out". It ended at about three am today, when I noticed that the streetlight was on and I went and threw the transfer switch back to commercial power. I leaned a lot during the power failure, and I invite comments and discussion to help other hams who are preparing for the coming winter and for public service events. [snip] They say an ounce of experience is worth a pound of theory, so I'm putting this out there, unvarnished, to illustrate some fundamental principles of disaster preparedness which I will be following in the future. Here's an update on what I've done since the storm, and also a request for help. I'll get to the "help" part in a moment. 1. Any fool knows you need extra matches around in the winter. I now have a book of matches next to every candle in the house. I also have a well-maintained flashlight in the drawer next to my bed. 2. Don't put off electrical work that you're going to be wishing you had done earlier if the power goes out. I've decided that the arrangement I had just wasn't workable: there's no reason to switch "everything" over to a generator that will only power a couple of things. So, I'm rewiring my home to have a generator feed available to only a few devices: A. Furnace B. Refrigerator C. Seven low-wattage compact-flurescent lamps, one in each room we usually use. D. The Internet connection: an ADSL Modem and the routers. With this arrangement, I anticipate that my current generator can support both the refrigerator and the furnace, as well as a few lights. 3. Any widespread outage is going to tax _ALL_ the resources of your community: gas stations, restaurants, and road-clearing. Unless you have your own water, food, fuel, and the capabilities to use them efficiently, your just a guy with some extra stuff lying around. I've moved my Coleman camping stove, some Coleman lanterns, and my kerosene lanterns underneath the stairs to my cellar, in a space that wasn't being used. The fuel for them is now in a small storage box on my back porch, so that I can get to it even if the path to my shed is blocked by snow. I'm keeping a five-gallon can of stabilized gas on hand, and I'm going to swap it into my car once a month and refill it. We have plenty of canned food, some dry food such as pasta, and some packets of things like cocoa, plus a couple of gallons of "spring" water just for good measure. Without power or the chance to get to a store, we'd still be well fed for about a week. 4. It's no good to buy a small generator and think that it prepares you for the winter. Without a proper setup and regular tests, you wind up with a marginally useful device that needs too much attention and provides sub-standard capabilities. As much as I hate to eat my words, I'm going to have to "make do" with the generator I have for a while. I can't complain too much, since I bought it for a great price and I knew that it wasn't a "whole house" machine at the start. My XYL has shown very little interest in upgrading to a larger model, so I've painted myself into a corner by demonstrating that the 2KW unit can work, even if only barely. I'll have to wait awhile before I can upgrade, and I'm gathering info in the meantime. However, there are larger issues, and here's where I'd appreciate help from the other readers. This applies to field day, to EmCom in general, and (of course) to being prepared for storms at home, and so I'm going to ask some questions about preparedness in the hopes that all can benefit. 1. What information source(s) are there for generator ratings, fuel consumption, durability, workmanship, and cost-per-watt? This may seem like the most obvious stuff, and it should be available anywhere, but the retailers' web sites don't have it, and I don't want to buy a set that isn't rated for "continuous duty". Are there any neutral parties who will offer an opinion? Are the specifications of units available to the government available to civilians? 2. How much do the various fuels cost to use, in real dollars? I've heard several people advise me to get a generator that runs on natural gas, but I've also seen claims that natural gas is a lot more expensive to use than gasoline or diesel fuel. Counting factors such as "derating", is natural gas competitive with diesel or gasoline? 3. What would it cost to fit a larger fuel tank? The 2KW Coleman unit I have only runs about 80 minutes before it needs refueling, and that's just too little time to allow for work and sleep. I'd like to have at least eight hours between refuelings. 4. What about noise? I need some information about ways that I can reduce the noise from my 2KW unit enough that I can run it at the same time I'm trying to sleep. 5. Last, the subject of keeping food on hand when the roads are blocked. How do I, as an individual, judge the companies that sell "emergency" food? I don't want to seem cynical, but all I could find is word-of-mouth opinions about the various firms that are in the business, and I'd like to have some more objective information available before I spend hundreds of dollars for freeze-dried or other long-term-storage food supplies. Thanks for your help. Bill, W1AC -- (Filter QRM to write to me directly) |
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