Some good comments pkveazey.
Here are some additional comments:
> As I have mentioned in the past our water cold/hot water system runs off our bank of marine deep cycle batteries
charged with solar. We also run off this system, some lights, Sirius radio, and when needed the great room ceiling fan.
> We also have a generator but we only use it for the freezers when the electric goes out.
> I just bought an additional marine deep cycle, Group 27, 90 amp battery. This battery lives is in my ham shack kept at
full voltage using with one of those smart trickle chargers to keep it at full power. I also installed an Anderson Power
Pole Power Strip. Hooked all of my radios up to it and my 120 volt/ 12 Volt power source. Last I made up a wire
harness that can reach from the battery - About 4 feet, to the Anderson Power Pole power strip. If the electric goes
out I unplug the 120/12 volt power supply and plug in my battery. Once the battery goes down to 12.5 volts (~50%
discharge) I will swap it out with one of the battery bank in my house battery bank. Or as pkveazey wrote, "If my
generator fails, I plan to use my automobile to recharge my battery backup."
Yeah, yeah, yeah we have other ways of generating electricity, batteries, solar battery chargers, inverters, etc but now, a commercial...
Even if you are not a prepper you need a handfull of those inexpensive BaoFeng HT (Handie Talkie) radios and a couple extra batteries. In an emergency, our local NOAA office monitors and uses one repeater to accept and report emergency information.
Case in point: Two weeks ago a front passed through the area that resulted in two tornadoes touching down. They announced this line of storms coming and requested trained SKYWARN spotters to report in as the front passed their AO. While this drama was happening around us we had the idiot box on. NOT ONCE was their an announcement on the TV.
I reported during the drama to NOAA what was happening at my AO, e.g. pea sized hail, 2" of water an hour, strong wind out of the east seady at 20 Mph with occasional gusts to 40 Mph. Not only did we listen to official NOAA announcements but hear reports from other spotters in the area. Again nothing was reported on the TV untill the war had passed with a banner on the bottom of the screen.
In closing, buy a BaoFeng, find out what repeater (s) your NOAA team uses for communication in a emergency and dial it into your HT for future use in an emergency. And as pkveazey suggested, have a couple of Baofeng battery's on hand.