I live in the Washington DC area. I have been home for four years since an 
accident at the beach (C4/5) and so far we have been pretty lucky with tropical 
storms and hurricanes. However, back in July we had a very unusual thunderstorm 
(called a “Derecho”) and we lost power for several days. With no air 
conditioning and no power for my low loss air mattress, I was moved to a local 
hospital. I hope this hurricane passes to our north. After it passes by, I 
would love to find some sort of a way to obtain a backup generator.

On a positive note, my oldest daughter got married back in August. The forecast 
was for very heavy rain on her wedding day. The day before, between the 
rehearsal and the rehearsal dinner, it rained cats and dogs. But on the day of 
her wedding, the storm somehow missed us completely. Thank God for that.

I've done a bit of research into generators, and based on what I have read, an 
inexpensive generator can damage batteries and sensitive electronics. 
Apparently, the more expensive generators use things called inverters. And 
apparently it takes a pretty big generator to run air conditioning. Does anyone 
know much about these generators? Any recommendations on units to buy, or how 
to raise donations to afford them?

Thanks,

Dave Krehbiel

-----Original Message-----
From: Bobbie Humphreys [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Saturday, October 27, 2012 1:56 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [QUAD-L] Hurricane Sandy

Hi All,
     I live 24 miles due west of NYC and Pete & I are doing our best to prepare 
for this "historic" combination "norestren inside of a stage 1 hurricane" 
headed straight for NYC. WE ALL live needing, and depending on, a LOT of 
electricity. I live in a 250 unit senior/disabled apartment building that has a 
very, very large generator. In June 2011 the new owner's were testing out the 
breaker system that back-up the elevator's and emergency lights in the 
hallways, OH and the alarm system. When they flipped the breaker .....… 
EVERYTHING blew out and shut down.
   The good of the bad is that they updated and fixed the problem. In August 
2011 when hurricane Irene hit us EXTREMELY HARD, everybody around us lost power 
for weeks .....… except us. Roads surrounding us stayed flooded for a little 
over 1 week.
  Anyway, how many of you all live where THIS storm is going to hit?    Bobbie  
 

Sent from my iPad

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