Actually had a freezing rain event that caused a 40 minute blackout near dusk. I had been reading the thread on "lessons from Seattle" earlier in the day. My wife is out of town, so I decided to rough it and test some of my preparations. Realized I have some gaps.
My 100 year old Rayo table top oil lanp fired up after 15 years of dormancy! However, despite using smokeless, scent free lamp oil, it still smelled and was putting out too much soot for my use in our newly painted rooms. Any Ideas on what I can do to minimize the soot/smell/ smoke? It put out a good deal of light, so I would love to add it to my official preparedness stuff, but it is too dirty for use in my house unless I figure out my error.
Also found my large mag flashlights that I have had since the early 80's were too heavy and bulky to actually want to carry around and do stuff with. I would use them obvoiusly but they fell suprisingly far down my list of prefered tools.
I also keep putting down my glasses, and wasted a lot of time going back to locate them. I am going to the drug store and pick up a lanyard to keep by my flashlight shelf, and will put it on as soon as I get to my main arsenal of flashlights. I won't care if I look like my mother on Bingo night, I want to have my glasses where I need them during such times.
Power came back on and about all I had accomplished was shutting down my PC desk and my new Home Theater. I was actually shocked at the number of other electrical components that now have computerization that were subjected to the power spike... Refridgerator, washer and dryer, dishwasher, Ipods charging, high efficiency furnace. There is some computerization in nearly every room.
Next time I may opt to switch my main house breaker off, and wait for the neighbors lights to come on, then power up one series at a time.
Edited by capsu78 (01/17/07 08:52 PM)
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"The last time I had a "good suprise", I was 5 and it was my birthday"