Any Generators, Power Banks, Solar Panels, etc…?

Edit: So I’m gonna answer my own question. I’ll probably freak out and would have zero generators to deal with it. Heater is Gas, but I don’t know if gas would work during power outage. Cooking, well there’s a butane burner stove. I have 3 10000mah batteries, but they have 60% efficiency due to power loss during transfer, so its effectively 6000mah, enough to roughly charge my 5000mah battery once, 3 batteries is 3-4 charges. Then I’d be bored with zero entertainment, along with all the food melting and going bad, very not fun 🙃

  • gramie@lemmy.ca
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    14 days ago

    Our generator will kick in within 30 seconds automatically, and has enough fuel to run the entire house for about 2 weeks.

  • lemming741@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Did two weeks after Helene. Generators, UPSs, and self-hosted services kept us entertained and the security cams powered up. There was some rationing for three or four days until the gas stations got power but we were ready. By the second day we were running the air conditioner at night to sleep and didn’t miss any football games on tv.

  • _edge@discuss.tchncs.de
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    12 days ago

    I can probably survive as long as water is available. I assume, heating (gas) will fail, but then the house temperature will only drop slowly and a sleeping bag with some blankets should keep us alive. Food? Tough, I don’t keep much food and most of what i have is refrigerated. But then things don’t spoil instantly. I would first eat what’s in the fridge, then from the freezer, then whatever is kept at room temperature.

    I guess two weeks. The real problem is all the other people and no functioning police, fire brigade, ambulance. I don’t grow my own food or hunt, so this will be practical problem, but I’m more afraid of all the other people who are also desperate.

  • froh42@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I’m living in an apartment on the 8th floor. Heating is geothermal heating (from a big geothermal plant owned by the city I live in). So no heating in winter. My second worry would be the food spoiling in the freezer. I’d probably move everything down into the car to drive to my family’s place (that’s a bit of work, 8th floor, no elevator) and then notice that my car is trapped inside the garage below our apartment block due to the electric garage doors not opening. I’d probably get some help from other people in the house opening them by hand (might involve dismounting of the electronics box).

    In other words, in case of a longer city-wide outage I’m screwed.

    In case it’s a shorter one and my electric window blinds in the bedroom are still closed, I wouldn’t worry and find someone to screw.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    15 days ago

    The longest power outage I’ve ever done was 2 weeks. The town kept the water and sewer going, we kept warm with a kerosene heater. My current house has a natural gas heater. I don’t keep like gallons of water stored up but I have a camp stove and a gas grill, I can cook if I need to, and we have three vehicles fueled and ready.

    I’m prepared for basically any natural disaster that leaves the state government in power. If it’s so bad that the governor isn’t around to give a press conference than I’m either also already dead or I’m going to be the guy that flies an F/A-18 into the alien’s superlaser.

    • bizarroland@fedia.io
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      15 days ago

      If you have a water heater you have a supply of drinkable water in the 40-80 gallon range, not counting what is in your pipes

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        15 days ago

        I don’t know if I want to drink what will roll out of my water heater’s drain. I don’t think it’s been drained since installed and I’m kind of afraid to do it.

  • Maple Engineer@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    We live in a large straw bale house in the country. We have a generator (and a dozen large gas cans which we rotate by filling our van then refilling the gas cans) which runs all the lighting circuits, the fridge and freeer, our propane in-floor radiant heat, water well, and our propane tanlkess DHW. We also have a wood stove in the center of the house that we can use to heat the house very effectively and more than a winter’s worth of good, dry hardwood in an enclosed wood shed. We have ample supplies of food and other necessities.

    Durign major weather events we leave our front door unlocked and our friends and neighbors know that they can come, bringing bedding and just find an open couch or floor space.

    We’ll be fine for a good long while

  • Endymion_Mallorn@kbin.melroy.org
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    15 days ago

    I’m literally dead in about a week. All of my heating, cooking, and refrigeration are electric, and I have no backup supply or the means to safely add a backup. So I’d have no food, very little water, and I’d freeze to death.

  • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Solar power on the roof, powerwall battery backup, and 3100 gallons of rainwater. All electric appliances here. We could go weeks without power.

    • CarrierLost@infosec.pub
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      14 days ago

      Same. 14kW system on the roof, 2800 gallons of water storage refilled from well with electric pump. 4xPowerwall batteries for storage/backup, all electric appliances/hvac.

      We can theoretically go for weeks as well, assuming moderate sun.

      Central Texas, 260+ days of sun here.

  • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Got an old wood stove that’s not really in use, but could be used for heat and cooking. Not entirely sure if could get dry wood quickly, but it probably get it to burn. I’ve done many a campfire with freshly collected wood.

    I’m also vegan, so most of my protein sources are legumes, which are either canned or dried, ie shelf stable. I buy those as well as rice and other shelf stable things in bulk because there’s only the tiniest little shop nearby and i try to stock up whenever I get to borrow a car. What I currently have would probably last me a month of normal eating, so i guess like two if i ration.

    If I can shop for things, I could go on indefinitely. Thinking about it, it sounds kind of nice to literally not be able to work on my thesis and get to read and draw a bunch.

  • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    I have a small 2kw military surplus generator that’s big enough to power my fridge, oil fired heating system and my computers. If I need to power a microwave or toaster oven, I can unplug the fridge or turn off the heating for a few minutes without an issues. The generator only uses about 3 gallons a day and with the heating oil tank, I have enough fuel for around 100 days. For those that don’t know, diesel fuel and home heating oil are the same thing. Heating oil and offroad diesel have a dye added to indicate that it has no onroad tax applied.

    A bunch of macho men gave me shit for only getting a 2kw generator when they had 10 to 15kw generators, but I know what I need and will enjoy not having to wait in line for fuel at the gas stations when there’s a wide area blackout.

    • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      A bunch of macho men gave me shit for only getting a 2kw generator when they had 10 to 15kw generators, but I know what I need and will enjoy not having to wait in line for fuel at the gas stations when there’s a wide area blackout.

      fuck em. dumbasses probably don’t have a real plan for when shit hits and spend the first 6-8 hours panicked and flustered not knowing if they have everything they need.

      doubt they even test it out. I usually do a full switch over once every other year just to make sure everything is working. Since I’m running 90% of my house it’s a huge pita to plan for. would be so much easier if I was focused on three or four appliances.

      I’m downright jelly sir 😆

  • Stalinwolf@lemmy.ca
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    15 days ago

    Used to love losing power during ice storms as a kid. Sure, I couldn’t play Bassin’s Black Bass on SNES, but my dad would stoke the fireplace and light up the extremely dangerous kerosine heater that smelled fucking awesome. Then we would chill with my mom on the couch and read Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.

    That kerosine heater never did blow the family up…

    • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      dad would stoke the fireplace and light up the extremely dangerous kerosine heater that smelled fucking awesome.

      kerosine has that effect on people 🤤

  • weeeeum@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    Tons of food in the fridge that would do fine outside with current temps. House is gas heated. I’d say we’d be good until we ran out of food. Probably a month or two including stuff from the pantry. Stove top and oven is also gas.

    Very little electricity though, but you dont need that to survive. I’ll play with my tools if I get bored. Would suck without much light

    • elephantium@lemmy.world
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      14 days ago

      My house has a gas-fired boiler. In theory, I should keep heat during a power outage, right?

      In practice, the circulation pump needs electricity, so the house gets kinda chilly during power outages.

      Hmm, I should see about getting a backup battery for the boiler.