As cheap as yu can find a small gen set for nowadays IMHO that s the
best option if you have a place to store it when its not in use......
Inverters etc are all well anf fine, but what happens if yu need the
vehicle. Why burn gas to fuel a 4, 6 or 8 cyclinder engine when fuel
may be hard to find depending on reason for power outage. Same thing
for UPS.....most wil power typical systems for a hour or two, provkded
no lights or heater is used.....but then they too run out of
power......Thats the big thing with any battery powered
device........Big Lots had 1500 or 2000 watt gas powered gen sets for
under $175 last year................which is more than sufficient for
any setup and that would also run lights and heater if need be. May
even run a small hot plate or coffee maker to make life a bit more
bearable or even a TV set......Harbor Freight has 2500 watt gas
powered gen sets for about $250. Most of these small gen sets run
approx 12-14 hours n a a mere couple of gal of fuel. I have a small
2500 watt Honda that runs 13 hours at 75% load.......and its only got
a 2 gal tank......Also have a LP / and gasoline fueled gen set thsat
is capable of powering the entire house just like if we were still on
utility power. IMHO if a person lives in a hurricane prone area or a
zone that is inundated with storms be it snow/ice or rains that cause
any kind of power outage, a gen set is the only real way to go. Our
whole house gen set starts automatically after a predetermined time
when power is out, and after power comes back on, the unit disconnects
from the house wire, runs and goes through a cool down period and
then shuts off, ready for the next power outage. Its fueled from a 500
gal propane tank I also use for my back yard foundry furnace, as wel
as fueling our gas grill. Push come to shove the flip of a lever will
allow it to fun on regular gasoline. During huricane Ivan it ran 3
weeks before we had power restored, and its on line quite a few times
though out any year......since we had it installed, which was about 4
months before Hurricane Ivan blew into town. The majority of folks
never worry about power until they are without then they all go to
town to try and buy that last gen set.......Gens sets are just to
handy to do without considering how little they cost and what they can
provide in return.
On Sun, 28 Jan 2007 12:00:21 -0500, that *other* annoying little troll
wrote:
KurtG wrote:
http://www.aquariumguys.com/silentairpump.html
I've heard that these pumps are a good investment for power outages
(which we frequently have in my locale).
The book that I'm reading implies that with a tall tank (like mine) and
lots of live rock (like mine), that the fishes could suffocate fairly
quickly.
Any comments?
--Kurt
Best way to go, if you can afford it, IMO:
http://tinyurl.com/2y54nd
http://www.apc.com/resource/include/...0%284%29UXBP24
Gives ya about 4 1/2 days for a couple powerheads plus an decent air
pump. better yet, just keep your skimmer running.
-------
I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know!