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Power Down Wakeup Call - Printable Version +- Survival UK Forums (http://forum.survivaluk.net) +-- Forum: Discussion Area (http://forum.survivaluk.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=13) +--- Forum: Scenarios (http://forum.survivaluk.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=84) +--- Thread: Power Down Wakeup Call (/showthread.php?tid=6804) Pages:
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Power Down Wakeup Call - Tarrel - 16 April 2014 I was one of the 200,000 people affected by the Scotland-wide power outage this evening. We lost power for around 2.5 hours. Good news: - Rayburn worked well, giving heating, hot water and a kettle for coffee - emergency light / grab-torch came on as required Not so good news: - I realised I've no idea where my head torch is, and it would have been useful - I have a leisure battery and 300w inverter for these types of situation, but the battery wasn't fully charged. 7/10 must try harder! RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Lightspeed - 17 April 2014 Hi Tarrel, A good real life test of your preparedness. You passed the test it seems:-) Re leisure battery being partialy discharged: Our solution is to use the leisure batteries to power the house burglar alarm (if power cuts, the alarm will stay active for at least 3 months) The batteries are permanently charged using a smart charger. This means that they are always 100% good to go when our mains power drops out. This system works well. The only issue we had was finding a smart charger that would not revert to a standby condition after mains power was restored. If you are sure to be at home to re-set the smart charging cycle, this is not an issue of course. From time to time Lidl and Aldi sell really well made smart chargers for around £15.... these are of the manual re-set variety. Stay safe up there! RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Nix - 17 April 2014 One item to consider would be one of those small solar panel chargers. It'd only be a trickle charge but, once you connect it up, you could virtually forget about it and it should keep your battery tip top (bar any heavy demands). The more serious you are about solar panels, the more involved it would be ie bigger panels and separate controllers etc. Worthwhile IMHO. RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Scythe13 - 17 April 2014 (16 April 2014, 23:49)Tarrel Wrote: 7/10 must try harder! I'll give you a 6.5 out of 10 hehe. I'm kidding mate. It's a good wake up call, as you said. Have you got a trickle charger for the battery? It won't give LOADS of power, but I'm sure you could just wire a couple of them in. It's free electricity, and trickle chargers are pretty cheap. Oh, just read Nix's comment. RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Barneyboy - 17 April 2014 i think the real test is if you would cope,and make do to your best with what you have ,we as preppers,we cant have every scenario prepared for .keep calm and carry on RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Tarrel - 17 April 2014 RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Jonas - 17 April 2014 Only 2 1/2 hours. We lose power here for four hours or so every other month. The local electric co-operative's chief engineer is neither the best nor brightest in the industry. RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Bucket - 17 April 2014 RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Mortblanc - 17 April 2014 Back in August 2003 we had a situation where a squirrel shorting out the lines blacked out power to 50 million people for 3-5 days. We generally expect out power grid to go down for 3-5 days of every year and any time during storms or natural disasters, that is one of the primary reasons for my preps. I have never experienced a collapse of the social order, financial collapse or invasion by aliens, but I really get ticked off when the icecream melts! RE: Power Down Wakeup Call - Barneyboy - 18 April 2014 good to see you have your priorities wright MB mate |