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Keeping Computers (And People) Warm In Winter? 568

Grimwiz writes "Similar to a few of you, I have some of my computers on a UPS. However, the UK press have recently been warning that power supply interruptions are likely this winter and I've been pondering about upgrading my power protection from those few machines to include a few key house components. In particular, I need to ensure that the gas-powered (but electrically controlled) central heating stays working. I have reviewed a few solutions, including Solar / Photovoltaic or purchasing a generator but they seem to be hugely more expensive than my simple UPS solution, although they do provide a much longer lasting solution than running off batteries. (A battery solution becomes quite expensive if I require more than an hours backup.) My power requirements for a quiescent house is about 4amps @ 250V, and I'd like to survive at least 8 hours. What solutions do you recommend?"
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Keeping Computers (And People) Warm In Winter?

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  • I suggest (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:48PM (#10611186)
    A warm jacket.
    • Re:I suggest (Score:5, Insightful)

      by pyat ( 303115 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:33PM (#10611453) Journal
      or more generally, invest in good insulation for your house. It'll pay for itself in saved heating even if you never have a power-outage, and if you do lose power for a while, your house will stay warmer longer.
    • by AliasTheRoot ( 171859 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @11:14PM (#10612220)
      A light shirt would probably be good enough to combat the harsh British winter.
  • porn (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:48PM (#10611189)
    porn keeps me warm in the winter
  • sex (Score:2, Funny)

    by keeleysam ( 792221 )
    will keep you warm in winter
    • Re:sex (Score:2, Funny)

      by 9mind ( 702505 )
      Was the parent called a troll because most slashdotters don't get sex to keep them warm? Power outage... I'd keep warm... as I have a backup generator... What?
  • UPS + Generator (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:50PM (#10611208)
    Use a normal UPS to bridge the first few minutes in which you can comfortable start a generator.
  • More batteries (Score:3, Informative)

    by Foxxz ( 106642 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:51PM (#10611209) Homepage
    21x twelve voltage batteries rated at 30Ah hooked up in series :)

    -Foxxz
    • Re:More batteries (Score:2, Informative)

      by erick99 ( 743982 )
      That would only be one hour, he wants eight. 21 x 12 = 250volts at 30 amps, he would then need this times eight to get to his eight hour requirement. There are much larger capacity batteries that would get the battery count down, though.
    • Use Car batteries in parallel.

      then use a DC to AC converter.

      Need to do some math, along with getting an over night battery recharger. But several of these should do.

      See this article [hypertextbook.com], seems that car batteries are typically rated in hundreds of amp hours (100 to 500), so two or three might do the job.

  • by nerd256 ( 794968 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:51PM (#10611213) Homepage
    Its like, when you're thirsty, asking for a bottle of water or asking for iodine tablets. It would be better to have both.

    It really depends on how long you expect your outage to last. UPS won't last for long, yet is crucial for small burps in the supply.

    For example, what if your generator runs out of gas?
  • by TykeClone ( 668449 ) <TykeClone@gmail.com> on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:52PM (#10611221) Homepage Journal
    If it doesn't get too cold, then the house should be able to survive 8 hours without the furnace running. Pipes are the only things to be really concerned with - just crack the taps to leave a trickle of water running so that they don't freeze and you're good to go.

    Oh, and drink whiskey. Lots and lots of whiskey. It makes good antifreeze for the blood :)

    • I was in London over a winter and it never got THAT cold. We had electric heaters, but we left them off most of the time. It wouldn't be a lot of fun to go a few hours without the heaters, but it certainly wouldn't have killed us.

      My guess, though, is that they want to remain a little bit comfortable during a power outage... not simply remain alive.
      • I live in the upper midwest and my furnace did go out overnight during the winter once. By the time I was able to get someone in to get it working, it had been about 8 hours. It was cold that evening, but not exceptionally cold (probably in the 20's) and it got down to about 50 in the house.

        Having said that, I have purchased a generator to keep the deep freeze running during the summer and the furnace running during the winter in the event of a long lasting power outage.

    • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:08PM (#10611327) Homepage
      your tips are right except for the joke about the liquor. getting drunk will increase your chances of death in extreme temperature.

      It does suprise me the number of people in civilized lands that are completely clueless to human survival.

      If the house get's to 1 deg C your pipes are still very safe 0.5degC is where I would start to worry. about the pipes. Being used to winters regularly getting to -5 to -10degC and recieving at least 36-48 inches of snow by mid winter I usually get a good laugh from those that live in warmer climates and their lack of knowlege about life.

      I would add to your tips. dress in lots of layers. a couple of undershirts with a regular shirt, a sweater and then a baggy sweatshirt, 2 pairs of pants on and then a regular jacket coupled with gloves and decent boots (3 pairs of socks, 1 plastic bag over each foot (if you venture outside) then in medicore boots can survive quite a long time in -3deg C weather out of the wind and elements. a Hat is a MUST if you venture out in any wind.

      your computer can get down to -30 degC before possible dsamage, and then it's highly unlikely. This is negated by the silly people with water cooling and not using ethelyne glycol for freeze, heat protection.

      layers are important, buy some long underwear or sweatpants just in case. In fact a pair of regular underwear, long underwear, and two pairs of jeans will easily protect a walking person in arctic temperatures if DRY for days.

      finally, gloves. get some that are decent and good socks/boots. you can survive horrible temperatures while your nose., fingers and toes freeze solid and then fall off days later.

      finally if it getr's really horrid, pitch a tent in your front room (a 4 season tent) and sleep in there. containing your heat in a smaller space will protect you massively in extreme temperatures.

      but the best thing is to find a female that is unprepared and scared and convince her that she and her 2 friends must sleep naked together in that tent with you in order to survive...

      you know use that shared body heat angle.. Chicks love the prepared rescue type... oh and don't shave for a day or so to look rugged... they dig that too...
      • I was joking about the whiskey :) I don't think a generator is really necessary to keep a house from becoming a deep freeze in 8 hours. 24 hourse is a different story.

        -5 to -10C isn't all that cold - that runs around 10 - 20F, right? If we averaged that, it would be what we call a mild winter (although we get nowhere near that amount of snow!)

        The worst is when we get the "Alberta Clippers" here. You get a blast of artic air come south over the great plains and, if you're really unlucky, hit warmer,

      • I wouldn't wait until it got that cold to start worrying about my pipes.
        Newer homes have plastic piping instead of copper. I'd say copper would freeze quicker since it is a better conductor than plastic. Also, pipes could be in uninsulated or not very well insulated parts of a home such as the basement where cold air will pool first.
        I'd rather be safe than sorry and take action as soon as possible, turn the taps on at about 5C; the hot and cold.
      • by NtroP ( 649992 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @11:44PM (#10612334)
        Heh, OK, I just can't let this opportunity pass (mostly because I have enough anti-freeze in my blood right now to not know when to STFU :-)

        I live in North Pole, Alaska (yeah, really) and I've seen it get to -70F (-57C) here a few times. I've actually saved myself from freezing to death by crawling under the hood of my truck to lay on the [rapidly cooling] engine when my belts snapped with the cold. I now make it a rule that I call in sick if it drops below -55F.

        In my experience, it takes a long time for pipes to freeze to the point where they burst. The power goes out a lot here (I have 3 APC 1100 UPS's under my desk to keep my computers and peripherals up during the black/brown-outs). Granted my house has 12" walls, but I've seen the power go out in the dead of winter here and, 12 hours later, the house might be down to around 40F. I do not run glycol in in my heating system, but I DO let the faucets drip (slowly) whenever it looks like it's going to be a long outage.

        Now, I have considered getting a generator (a lot of people have them around here), and it would probably be a good idea. But in leu of that, [we] have a rather impressive set of winter gear that we can rely on - my parka has build-in, replaceable 8-hour chemical heaters under each arm and my "bunny-boots" could probably have kept the astronauts toasty on the moon.

        That being said, I'd have to echo the parent post about finding the chicks. It's usually best to have the wife and kids spend a nice warm night in a hotel though, before you invite said chicks over to help you survive.

  • Buy bigger batteries (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Repugnant_Shit ( 263651 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:52PM (#10611222)
    I have a small, 20 minute UPS. Once the battery could no longer hold a charge, I took it out and replaced it with a higher capacity VRLA battery that I got from work. With one LCD and one computer, I get about 9 hours of reserve time. The UPS does not get hot, even when the battery has been significantly discharged. I plan on doing this to two other UPS that I bought at a flea market for $10.
    • by shostiru ( 708862 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @09:13PM (#10611644)
      Seriously. We've done this at work (both satellite batteries and replacements), and had one go kaboom when H2 gas caught a spark. The top of the battery dented the ceiling, and we had to throw baking soda all over everything to neutralize the sulfuric acid. If anyone had been in the area at the time they wouldn't been in a world of hurt.

      A co-worker had seen the exact same thing happen in his last job.

      I'm not familiar with what "VRLA" means, but unless the battery is sealed gel-type and rated for deep discharge and repeated cycling, I'd wouldn't use it.

      • by SuperBanana ( 662181 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @11:00PM (#10612150)
        I'm not familiar with what "VRLA" means, but unless the battery is sealed gel-type and rated for deep discharge and repeated cycling, I'd wouldn't use it.

        VRLA is Valve Regulated Lead Acid...VRLA is better than a sealed lead acid precisely because it will NOT explode- it will vent if charged too fast.

        VRLA is a teensy bit different from a standard gel cell in terms of charge profile, but they're close enough that it shouldn't matter much; I think the float voltage is typically lower. HOWEVER, you DO need to make sure you match specifications ( and not just "12v", get the specs sheet and look at the charge, float, etc voltages), and be aware that VRLAs are not particularly fond of heat; adding a tiny fan to the UPS enclosure would probably be a swell idea anyway as the buggers tend to run hot.

        The REALLY thorough will check the charge current from the UPS. UPS makers are under pressure to get the battery charged back up quickly, and they may push the limits of the battery's charge current. It's generally C/20 where C = A/Hr capacity; ie a 20Ahr battery should not be charged faster than 1A continuous (a brief peak charge might be OK, and if so, will be specified in current and duration). Charging too fast will cause gassing, overheating- and past a certain point, like many other batteries, lead acid batteries of any type can go into thermal runaway, which is not pretty.

        Adding in extra batteries into a UPS not designed for expansion will be trouble, on the charging side of the equation. If you've ever had a completely dead car battery and tried to charge it with a charger, you know what I'm talking about- the voltage drop is so great, the battery practically acts like a short and will cause the charger to overload. The same thing could happen with a UPS. A good sign is if there are battery expansion packs available for your UPS; use that as a guide for sizing.

        Oh, and by the way, you may want to consider adjusting your UPS to use the proper float voltage (not for the faint of heart, but possible on some UPS's without soldering), and again, installing a low-speed fan to move some air through the thing and keep everything cool. Many UPS vendors coughAPCcough set their float voltages too high and thus cook the batteries, and the elevated temperatures don't help either; that all makes for a nice revenue stream, as they charge a fortune for replacement packs(which are almost always made up of standard-size batteries, and thus available much more cheaply if you're the enterprising type). Properly maintained lead-acid batteries should last almost a decade- yet most UPS batteries die within a matter of 2-3 years. It's pathetic, considering how much lead is in them and how most people probably don't dispose of the UPS's or the batteries properly.

    • I have a small, 20 minute UPS. Once the battery could no longer hold a charge, I took it out and replaced it with a higher capacity VRLA battery that I got from work.

      To anyone that reads this and thinks it's a good idea to go out and buy a big massive marine deep cycle battery - don't. Most UPS systems have pretty bad cooling and if they're run at full load for an extended period of time (thanks to being connected to your giant battery) they can overheat and cause a fire. When you consider the fact this
  • I suggest... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by naturaverl ( 628952 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:56PM (#10611249)
    Well, 4A @ 250v = 1000 W, for 8 hrs is 8 kWh. That's a lot, and would probably be very expensive to maintain with a battery-based solution. I'd say a generator would be the way to go.
    • Re:I suggest... (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:14PM (#10611368)
      The other thing you need to consider when designing your system: what power factor [wikipedia.org] will you be dealing with?

      You see, most UPS systems are rated in "volt amps". If you have a purely resistive load, that's the power drawn. However, as soon as you throw any inductors or capacitors into the circuit, the equation no longer holds. This is where the power factor comes into the equation.

      You're talking about 4 amps at 250 V, over a period of 8 hours. That's 1000 watts for eight hours, or 8 kilowatt hours. However, this doesn't cater for the power factor -- if your house has a power factor of 0.8, for example, batteries capable of providing that current for that period of time will run your house for about six and a half hours. So you'll need to bring up the batteries to 10 kilowatt hours to compensate -- either that, or (if it's an inductive load) buy a whopping great big bank of capacitors to bring the power factor back up to a reasonable level.

      Industrial sites have to deal with this; the power company doesn't like sites that draw excessive current compared with their power usage, and will bill them big time if their power factor is too low. Most residential sites aren't a concern in this regard; their usage is too low for the power company to worry.

      If you've specced it out based upon the current draw (ie: sticking a current meter in series with the circuit), you've automatically compensated for the power factor. If you've done the maths based upon the power rating of the devices, though, you need to consider this stuff. Any competent electrician should be able to help you out here.

      • Re:Oops.. (Score:5, Informative)

        by Technician ( 215283 ) on Sunday October 24, 2004 @02:03AM (#10612746)
        You're talking about 4 amps at 250 V, over a period of 8 hours. That's 1000 watts for eight hours, or 8 kilowatt hours. However, this doesn't cater for the power factor -- if your house has a power factor of 0.8, for example, batteries capable of providing that current for that period of time will run your house for about six and a half hours. So you'll need to bring up the batteries to 10 kilowatt hours to compensate -- either that, or (if it's an inductive load) buy a whopping great big bank of capacitors to bring the power factor back up to a reasonable level.

        Umm you got it backwards.. Lets go to the facts..

        Starting with some glossary terms..

        Volts = Electrical pressure
        Amps = Electrical current
        Watts = Power
        VoltAmps = Volts * Amps
        Vars = Volts Amps Reactive.
        Power Factor = Percent of Volt Amps that are Power scaled 0-1.

        What's it mean?
        If you drop a Capacitor on an AC line, it will draw current but not get hot unless it's not designed for the voltage, current, or polarity.

        The current is said to be reactive. All of the current measured in VA is not Watts. The power Factor is zero. Volts * amps * power factor = watts. Most inverters don't like a highly reactive load. This may dammage it.

        A light bulb gets hot. It is not an inductor or capacitor.. It has a power factor of 1. Volts * amps * power factor = Watts.

        A furnace motor may have a power factor of 0.8. If it drew 4 amps at 250 volts it's VA = 4*250 or 1000VA. The actual power draw in watts is 80% of tthe VA. Remember power = Volts * Amps * Power Factor or 250 * 4 * 0.8 = 800 Watts.

        So in the above example in the parant, the load draws 800 watts. If it draws it for 8 hours, that's 6.4 KWH not 10 KWH.

        Remember that inverters don't like reactive loads. The inverter may take the reactive power and dump it as heat depending on the design. That's 200 watts of reactive power. You also need to scale for conversion consumption. The inverter uses power. It is not a lossless process.

        If you run large reactive loads, save your inverter by looking into doing some power factor correction.

        With a reactive load such as a transformer or motor, the current lags the voltage. In a capacitive load such as a noise filter, current leads the voltage. It is possible to correct reactive load problems with lamp ballasts, motors and transformers by adding capacitors to the line. You want a capacitor that has the same VAR rating as the load you are trying to correct. In the above example, we have a reactive component of 200 watts. (800 true watts subtracted from the 1000 VA leaves the reactive component of 200 watts reactive) Adding 200 watts capacitive reactance will cancel out the inductive reactance load. This will reduce the load on the inverter. Now it sees a 800 VA load, not a 1000 VA load. Now the inverter sees a power factor corrected to 1. The motor still draws 1000 VA but now gets the 200 VA reactive component from the capacitor, not the inverter.

        I hope I didn't loose too many in the dry discussion of what a VAR is.

        Anyway, this is the reason on some power poles, you may see a bank of capacitors. It is used to correct power factor and reduce the amprage load on a substation.
    • I live with two other people in a 2 bedroom 1 bath condo and we use (on average) 1000 KWH per month during the summer and 2500 KWH per month during the winter (all electric heat).
  • Need a generator? (Score:2, Interesting)

    If you are going to need a generator occasionally, but don't want to pay the upfront cost, you might consider hooking your DC system (assuming that it runs at 12V) into your car and then using the car as a generator

    • Re:Need a generator? (Score:5, Informative)

      by stratjakt ( 596332 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:11PM (#10611345) Journal
      Better yet, one of the hybrid gas/electrics, those things basically have what amounts to a mega-super-duper alternator, and you can plug right into the vehicles.

      I just got back from Epcot, where GM had a display about their gas/electric hybrid pickups and how they were used during the Florida hurricane's as mobile power generation stations. Apparently you can plug right into one of them, and they'll give you 120 VAC @20 amps, which is not too shabby. (No doubt the UK model serves up 240VAC)

      • Get a hyperefficient Whispergen [whispergen.com] Stirling generator. It would both heat your home and provide electric power by burning natural gas. In fact, if your meter is wired correctly, at times you would be selling power back to the power companies. You can think of it as augmenting your furnace heat with a 2nd device and getting electricity (in the form of your own off-grid generator) for free.
  • by TyrranzzX ( 617713 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:58PM (#10611263) Journal
    I run a benchmarking app and leave it on, and my room is toasty all winter long. Infact, if the window is closed, it gets too warm.
  • Gas - Electricity (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gulthek ( 12570 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @07:58PM (#10611267) Homepage Journal
    If you have gas then you can get a natural gas electrical generator. Connected to the gas line, when power goes out some models will automatically ignite and provide power to the house, some require a manual ignition.
  • Cut the Fat (Score:5, Informative)

    by Nehi the Ganchark ( 818676 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:00PM (#10611275) Homepage
    Another approach you could take is to take steps to make your household more energy efficient -- upgrade your insulation, get energy star rated appliances, change to flourescents -- all of those things we should have learned in school and keep learning about in the adverts that come with our energy bills.

    You could look into alternative energy sources, but since cost is a factor, I won't go into details, except to say the up-front costs can be prohibitive.

    In all honesty, a generator IS your best option if you want to keep running in a blackout. You may be able to poke around and find a used one for 1/3 the cost of the new article.

    If that's still not an option, build a fire pit and stock up on wood...
  • Our gas supply (Score:5, Interesting)

    by eric76 ( 679787 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:00PM (#10611278)
    We get natural gas directly from the wellhead.

    The lease dates back to the 1940s and at the time it wasn't uncommon for the leaseholder to be able to use all the gas they needed from the well for household use.

    The oil and gas company that has the lease desperately wants to change those terms.

    The only downsides are:
    1) Occasionally the well will freeze up in the winter. That's not that much of a problem because my oldest brother who also lives on the farm is retired from that same oil and gas company and can thaw out the well.
    2) There are no odorants added to the natural gas and so it has no smell to tell you that you have a gas leak. I ended up in the hospital once because of that when a natural gas heater went out and let the room fill with natural gas.
    • Re:Our gas supply (Score:3, Interesting)

      by eric76 ( 679787 )
      By the way, in case of an electrical power disruption, we have a large generator that can run everything in the houses. We just attach it to a tractor via a PTO (Power Take Off) and run the tractor until the electric power is restored.

      A few years ago, there was a massive power outage throughout this area for about 12 hours. We were one of the few to have normal power throughout most of the outage because of that generator.
    • Re:Our gas supply (Score:3, Insightful)

      by TykeClone ( 668449 )
      #2 is very nasty and dangerous. That's not stuff to fool with.
  • Feh, Heat (Score:5, Funny)

    by El Puerco Loco ( 31491 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:01PM (#10611284)
    You can get used to the cold, just like anything else. Hypothermia is an absurd myth perpetuated by the heating and clothing companies to sell you their expensive and unnecessary products.
  • by bobbis.u ( 703273 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:02PM (#10611294)
    Do I understand this correctly? Does he want to ensure that his central heating can stay running for 8 hours during a potential power outage? What is the point of that? You're not really going to get that cold within 8 hours. The human race did manage to survive for tens of thousands of years without central heating. Piece of advice one: forget about the central heating and buy a decent coat for power cuts. Anyway, assuming he actually wants to keep other more important things running - life support machine perhaps - he has 2 options:
    • A generator
    • Lots of lead acid batteries

    Simple as that. The first option is cheap and effective, but makes a bit of noise, and will need somewhere outside to run it. The second option needs quite a bit of space, is expensive and requires a fair amount of other expenditure for charging circuits, inverters, etc. It also runs out after a while and there is nothing you can do then. If you use a generator, you can always put more petrol/diesel in, assuming you keep a decent stock.

    Solution: Google for a 1500W generator (e.g. [pricegrabber.com]). Problem solved - next question please.

    • P.S. Just thought I would point out that solar cells are useless for this application - you would be screwed if you had a power cut at night.

      They could be used to charge the batteries, but it sounds like he is trying to do things cheaply, so should just use the mains for that.

  • Electrician (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Detritus ( 11846 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:04PM (#10611311) Homepage
    You might want to talk to an electrician who specializes in backup power systems. There are safety and electrical code issues on how circuits are switched from mains power to UPS/generator power and back again.
  • by scattol ( 577179 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:05PM (#10611316)
    It's quite likely that you don't need heat if your power interruption is only going to be 8 hours. During the Quebec ice storm [canoe.ca] we were out of electricity for 7 days. The house will stay decently warm for the first 2 days. It will be chilly for the next 2 and getting cold after that. But even after 7 days the appartement was still above freezing in weather that was always a little below freezing.

    My recommendation: don't sweat 8 hours of power failiures.

    That said, if you really need electricity, say to prevent perishable from going bad your best bet is a generator essentially because it's easy to refuel and keep going for days. You also get decent power in relatively small packages.
  • Is there a reason behind their statement? Here in the midwest US there would be hell to pay for 'power outages' in the winter...
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Your best method (but not the cheapest) is a hybrid battery (UPS) and Generator solutions. Generators for 4Amp@250Volts are not that large, or that expensive. (Well, this is all relative I suspect, but if you think a UPS is really cheap, I figure you can afford it.)

    Get a large-ish UPS that can support this power consumption for, oh, 15 minutes. Make sure your generator is ready to work at any time. Power goes out, plug the UPS into the generator, and start it up. As long as you have the UPS (a kind of
  • blankets (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Treeleaf ( 759543 )
    The temperatures in the UK are not extreme. If your house gets cold that quickly, I would suggest to upgrade your isolation material. Or you could always use some blankets to keep you (and ..your computers) warm. My .02 euro
  • Being a poor college student, I found that an Intel PC can be a great way to save on a heater. How's how you do it. You buy a stock Dell PC, put as many 7200 RPM hdds as you can into it, upgrade the video card and leave it on 24/7 with the windows closed. Voi la, not only do you have a fairly good computer, but you have a central heating system for at least a bed room on the cheap!
    • by jgaynor ( 205453 )
      Honestly you're right - but I've found CRT monitors more effective at producing heat. Older, larger CRT monitors are basically small space heaters. A multi-monitor setup with old IBM 'powerdisplay' model CRTs will heat a dorm room VERY quickly.
      • Honestly you're right - but I've found CRT monitors more effective at producing heat. Older, larger CRT monitors are basically small space heaters. A multi-monitor setup with old IBM 'powerdisplay' model CRTs will heat a dorm room VERY quickly.

        You mean like this [stcloudstate.edu]?

        Yes, they are all functional, and there is even one more screen you can't see in this picture.
  • by lga ( 172042 ) * on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:16PM (#10611383) Journal
    What power interruptions? I think you are talking rubbish. If you aren't, then the press are. We are in a first world country with a decent infrastructure and it is extremely unlikely that we will have mass powercuts. Unless you live in the middle of nowhere and are supplied by one overhead power line, make sure your computer is on a UPS and stop worrying about it.
    • by fire-eyes ( 522894 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:46PM (#10611505) Homepage
      Yeah well I live in Detroit USA, and guess what last year 4 days because of that big outage.

      1st world country does not always equal a stable power system.

      Just ask people living in California.
    • We are in a first world country with a decent infrastructure and it is extremely unlikely that we will have mass powercuts.

      Are you kidding? I'm not too sure about the UK, but where I live (US), rolling blackouts and brownouts are not totally uncommon in the summer, when electricity consumption is at its highest. Even if your distribution infrastructure is the best in the world, it's no help if you're not generating enough power in the first place. Line problems are not that uncommon either - I live i
  • Just curious, how did you stay warm during previous winters?
  • living in FLA (Score:3, Interesting)

    by sulphurlad ( 772436 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:23PM (#10611407)
    Having lived through 3 hurricains in 6 weeks, after Charlie my wife made me buy a generator, best purchase I made in years ( besides that new G5 17" imac). The only generator available was a huge 12000 watt unit for like $2000. I bought it anyway, more is better right. Well we were outa power for like 10 days total, but I had the genny running and was able to power the whole house, including the A/C. Man i loved watching Lord of the Rings in the a/c, on my entertainment center, while my neighbors were trying to find out when the next shipment of ice was coming into the area. Just Kidding, I had my neighbors over to the house alot. Then we went through the other 2, needless to say that genny is hard wired into the house pannel now.
  • What about a methane-based power generation? (either a fuel-cell or retrofitted gas generator)

    Some farmers already use them. They extract the methane from manure from their livestock as the manure is prepped for fertilizer use (they need to let it "rest" before they can use it as fertilizer). The extracted and captured methane is typically fed into a retrofitted generator. It's called Bio-Methane [green-trust.org]
    In some cities, they extract it from sewage. So if u have a septic system, you might be able to collect m
  • The UK doesnt get that cold, why on earth do you need to keep the heating running? Get some proper insulation, seriously I put the heating on for a couple of hours a day in January if it's particularly cold.
  • Not exactly what you are looking for, but check out Home power magazine [homepower.com]. Many things that a good hacker can adapt. They are most US based, so they won't cover some UK issues. (US is 60 hz)

    Just watch the politics, there are very many publications more extreme on the "left". Interesting in other words, but don't believe everything they write.

  • There was guy in my class who lived out in the countryside. Short power outages occurred frequently due to snow on the powerlines. Their solution was to get a diesel generator and an AC/DC power trip switch/convertor.

  • Use hybrid (Score:3, Interesting)

    by horza ( 87255 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:31PM (#10611442) Homepage
    Solar voltaics can provide backup, as can a micro-chp station. This old article [bbc.co.uk] talks about micro-chp, but basically when you are heating your house you get 1kW/h of free electricity. Connect this to a fuel cell, and when you are producing excess electricity then you store it up in hydrogen. When you burst it can be taken directly from the fuel cell without paying the national grid. Use white LEDs for lighting, a VIA mini-itx for your server, and your electricity bills will be only for your cooking and heating.

    Phillip.
  • Migrate (Score:3, Funny)

    by gyges ( 79472 ) <jasonpjdc@gmail.com> on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:35PM (#10611457)
    Each year during winter I migrate from a PPC chip system to an Intel based system for greater warmth. In summer, I return to the cooler PPC. Just like whales.

    Seriously, you probably should investigate a natural gas generator, talk to a good electrician, and be prepared to combat a plethora of zoning (or similar in the UK) restrictions. Alternativly you could reinforce the floors of your house and consider lead-acid batteries but many of these solutions are solar oriented and not ideal for the UK in winter.

    It's not easy being green.
  • by sludg-o ( 120354 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:37PM (#10611472)
    If your gas furnace's blower and exhaust fans run on electricity, which I'm pretty sure they do, you're not going to get more than a minute or two out of a UPS. Those big fans push a lot of air and draw a lot of power. If you're really worried about staying warm, get a propane space heater and a 20lb tank. It will be enough to keep a room or two warm for a couple days.
    • mod up.

      backup heating doesn't have to be the furnace... unless you got some very important stuff there in which case you should have a generator anyways.
    • get a propane space heater and a 20lb tank

      Don't do this. Catalytic propane space heaters are meant to be used in open, well-ventilated areas, like outdoors. Used in enclosed spaces, a dangerous level of CO2 can build, which can be potentially lethal. This is especially dangerous in an outage situation, where you're likely to huddle in a smaller, well insulated room and close the doors.

      Your best bet for an emergency heat source is a fireplace. Wood is good, but propane is simpler to operate, easier to

  • by mhollis ( 727905 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:56PM (#10611553) Journal

    You live in the UK, which tends to not have enough sun to make photovoltaic worthwhile. Either you need a positively huge array (and the one in the picture on the website you link to looks like it fairly covers all available space on the roof) or you need lots of sun and Britain just doesn't have that.

    Your best (but polluting) source of electricity is a honda generator. You can buy them all over and I'd imagine a DIY outlet will have a few models to choose from. One member here mentions that he did quite well after a hurricane with one. Do not ever run one indoors. They create carbon monoxide so their exhaust needs to be away from the house so that it cannot seep in through a window, vent or other entrance.

    You will need a UPS with a generator if you are running a computer, but you don't need one for equipment that may be shut off and restarted, like fans, washers, dryers, refrigerators, etc. You need enough battery life to be able to survive a power outage until you can get the generator running. So if your computer needs to run all of the time, make sure your battery will last long enough for you to wake up, put on clothes and go tend to the generator.

    Insulation and sealing are the best non-polluting way to increase heat -- and you will save money on heating fuel all winter, so it pays for itself.

    The more insulation you have in your walls and on the roof, the better you are. Be sure there is an air pocket that runs up your eaves on your roof so that you don't get mold on your rafters and shingles and you're all set. You want to add to your "R-Value" in such a way so that you can keep enough home heat inside to keep warm in any full-day power outage.

    The homes I've visited in England have tended to be fairly drafty as compared to US homes. So look at your doors and windows and make sure they seal well when you close them. Windows ought to be double-pane windows, which hold in heat four times better than single-pane.

    I don't necessarily recommend that you keep up the electricity lifestyle during a power outage. Turn off your computer, unless you need it for work. Use hurricane lanterns and "Coleman" white gas lanters with mantles to light up your home (they'll also add heat but not as efficiently, perhaps, as a real heater). Run up your heater on your generator until it is quite warm inside and then shut it off until things cool down just under bearable temperatures. Don't open any windows to moderate the heat and keep things sealed up as best you can. Don't use the television, save to get information about the power emergency (a radio is usually better anyway for up-to-the-moment information anyway). Run your generator sparingly.

    And talk to your local MP and ask why your area is so ill-served with electricity. Ask if his district is not one of second-class citizenry if your power goes out as often as is predicted. Gather your friends and neighbors to help him think more clearly (if he sees you as a voting bloc, he'll think clearly) about the need to introduce a change in the system.

    • clarification (Score:3, Informative)

      by zogger ( 617870 )
      coleman gas lanterns or stoves or heaters that run on liquid coleman fuel or unleaded gasoline "white gas" are not recommended for indoor use. You'll kill yourself with CO buildup as they are sucking O2 out of the air. They will even tell you that on the box. The propane fired ones are a lot cleaner and safer to burn indoors, and even then you should have some windows cracked. You can get adapters for around 10$ that will let you attach them to a 20 lb refillable tank instead of the expensive 1lb throw away
  • by deeptrace ( 749252 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @08:57PM (#10611556) Homepage
    You can run a gas furnace off of the heat generated from the pilot light using a thermopile and a millivolt controller gas valve. I have heated my house this way in the middle of winter over a 3 day ice storm blackout.

    It must be a hot water system. Just open all of the zone valves and eventually the whole system will heat up to the furnace temperature via convection in the pipes. The furnace will cycle between its low and high temperature, even with no power except the thermopile.

    This is a standard type of system in the US. Not sure about the UK.

    See http://hearth.com/what/gas/howgasworks.html for info on millivolt gas systems.

  • by Colin Smith ( 2679 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @09:03PM (#10611587)
    http://www.sunmachine.de/english/index_y.html

    Not in full production yet but should be in a year or so. Once it is it'll be possible to have your own solar power station in your back garden.

    35% efficient at converting heat into electricity and the rest of the heat is used for central heating and hot water giving an overall efficiency of 90% or so. If not enough sun, it can switch to gas powered generation.

    Will it compete with a cheap petrol generator? Not in the short term. In the long term, it supplies electricity to the grid as well as heating the house, so not only does it reduce your bills, it actually earns some cash.

  • by kragwad ( 771999 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @09:15PM (#10611659) Homepage
    "However, the UK press have recently been warning that power supply interruptions are likely this winter "

    Get your facts right. I don't know what coverage you're reading (the tabloid papers I suspect) but there is no power supply crisis forcast for this winter.

    What has been commented on is our increasing reliance on imported power from the continent, and coupled with the decommissiong of several major nuclear power plants over the next decade if we don't act now there could be problems in the future. I don't think UPS'ing your heating system is necessary just yet :)

    "But the government said the outlook for power supplies this winter was good and accused the union of "scaremongering""

    Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3751810.stm [bbc.co.uk]

  • by intellicharge ( 824815 ) on Saturday October 23, 2004 @10:21PM (#10611995)
    If you don't want to shell out the money for a commercially built generator, you can likely put together your own system for about $50.00 CDN using some scrap car parts and an old lawnmower.

    That's probably less than it would cost you to add a SINGLE additional battery to your system.

    Here's how: Find yourself an old "horizontal" style lawnmower engine (anything over 2HP will do) and a car alternator - the bigger the better. Put a pully on each, string a V-belt between them and bolt them down to a thick piece of plywood or better, some sort of metal frame. Using the wire from a set of old booster-cables, hook the output from the alternator (which should be outside, of course) through the nearest convenient window (or drill a hole in the wall) and across your UPS battery (making sure it is the CORRECT POLARITY). When the power goes out for more than 20 minutes, go outside and start up the engine for practically unlimited runtime.

    Even with a small car alternator, this rig will easily give you 12 volts at fifty amps. If you use a larger alternator, like the kind you would find on a truck, you can get 12 volts at up to a HUNDRED amps (= 1,200 watts).

    I once put a system like this together for fun for under $50.00 CDN, ($30.00 for a beat-up old engine in the local bargain-finder and $20.00 for an alternator from the local scrapyard.) This is significantly less expensive than buying even a single extra battery, which would cost about $80.00. The thing would run for HOURS before needing refueling, and if I wanted longer runtime I could have just added a bigger gas tank.

    Now, before you pack up your wrenches and head down to the local scrapyard, there is something you need to check: Does your UPS use a single large 12-volt battery, or does it use two smaller 12-volt batteries in SERIES for a total of 24-volts? If your system has two 12-volt batteries in series, you're going to need a 24-volt alternator. Where do you get a 24 volt alternator? Well, most Land Rover vehicles have 24-volt alternators, as would practically any kind of emergency vehicle, most military vehicles, and many large trucks. So, if you need a 24-volt alternator and can't find a Land Rover at your local wreckers, head to an INDUSTRIAL vehicle scrapyard.

    For the load you initially described, (250 volts @ 4 amps = 1,000 watts at continuous use) you would need a sustained power INPUT of about 1,200 watts. Note however, that in reality you will probably NOT need 1,000 watts continuous output as your furnace blower will be cycling on and off as will the other loads in your house. The UPS's battery will cover the extra load when everything IS running and recharge from the alternator when it ISN'T. This means you can likely get by with a smaller alternator.

    Overall, the solution I have described is ugly, noisy, and isn't likely to last through more than 100 hours of use. But it's also cheap, light (compared to a battery), easy to hook into the UPS, quite reliable, and works great if you only need a few hours of additional electrical power. If you're mechanically inclined, this is the cheapest and most effective solution I can think of.

    If you're really keen on the whole batteries/UPS/alternator modding-it-to-run-on-practically-any-source-of-pow er thing or just want even more reasons why trying to run it off solar power would be a terrible idea (at least where you live), I did a really interesting writeup on this for an anti-landmine technology competition a few years back. We made the whole reference design that we came up with effectively "open-source", so feel free to use it as you please. You can have a look at that here: http://www.intellicharge.ca/Downloads/Downloads.ht m [intellicharge.ca] The server has pretty serious bandwidth so it should be relatively /. resistant, but please don't rack up our hosting bill by downloading the full 1200dpi 114 MEG "print resolution" version unless you have good

  • by Feztaa ( 633745 ) on Sunday October 24, 2004 @12:28AM (#10612498) Homepage
    replace all your computers with Athlon XP boxes. if your heater cuts out, the computers will keep the house warm.
  • by ecloud ( 3022 ) on Sunday October 24, 2004 @02:17AM (#10612787) Homepage Journal
    Well what do you think is in a UPS? Batteries right? So why are batteries more expensive than a UPS solution? And UPSs tend to die every couple years too.

    I do grant you that solar panels are expensive. But it could be a worthwhile expense.

    My approach is that everything that I want to keep running when the power goes out should run from either 12V or 24V. I have a 24VDC system. Two 12V batteries in series for 24V, and a third 12V battery which is kept charged by a DC/DC converter [solarseller.com]. (This was mostly because I had surplus batteries; 12V alone would be fine for many purposes. My earlier attempt was with a pair of 6V golf-cart batteries in series. These are capable of storing a lot of energy, and they last a long time if well taken care of, but they do consume water.) The 24V system is charged by a pair of large solar panels on the roof, which I got used on ebay. I'm a little underwhelmed though with the current that I'm getting out of them, so suggest you should get new ones with the best efficiency you can find. Today I was getting a peak of 3 amps charge current. That's only 72 watts, and it is not providing that much all day long, either. Consequently my "secondary" grid-powered battery charger is providing most of the charging. I have 2 computers running on batteries now, and together they draw about 4 amps continuously from the 24V supply. One is an Athlon with an Orion 24V ATX power supply, and the other is a fanless Epia 600, supposedly low power, but it is drawing a bit over 2 amps off the 12V supply (which translates to a bit over 1 amp off the 24V supply). The Epia has one of these [mini-box.com], which gives me the flexibility to run from either voltage.

    CRTs are line-powered but LCDs typically run from a lower voltage. Right now I have two big CRTs for my main system and they are power hogs, and generate a lot of heat. Some day I will upgrade, and I think it's possible to find LCDs which have wall-wart power supplies rather than built-in. I would bet some of them are 12V too. So then I will be set - I could do any kind of computing I like even during a power outage. A laptop is also a good solution, but those usually charge from less standard voltages, like 16 or 18. It's unfortunate.

    12V lighting is easy, because RVers use so much of it. You can find 12V fluorescent lights, halogen track lights (but that's kindof wasteful), LED lights etc. In an extended power outage I would turn off one or both of the computers, and then the 24V battery would keep the 12V battery charged, and I could have lighting indefinitely as the solar panels charge the 24V battery every day. The kitchen has a drop ceiling with several 4' grid-powered fluorescent lights already. I added a 2' 12V powered RV light. It is well hidden above the translucent ceiling panels, and provides enough light to get by.

    For my computer rack I made a panel with efficient switching DC/DC converters that supply 5V and 3.3V as well, for things that would otherwise have been powered by inefficient "wall wart" power supplies. Just consolidating all of those to a single source should save a lot of power. The panel has a bunch of these [ocraces.org] connectors. I use red & black for 12V, blue & black for 24V, orange & black for 5V and yellow & black for 3.3V. (I debated about whether to follow the PC power supply color convention, but the ham radio guys have already chosen red for 12V, and that doesn't match.) I plan to use brown for any other odd voltage that I may need later; I notice a lot of things running from 7.5V, for instance (hubs and scanners and stuff like that). I used some panel-mount holders like these [connex-electronics.com] to mount them on a rack panel. If you don't want to make your own p

  • by alpha ( 8839 ) on Sunday October 24, 2004 @02:23AM (#10612813)

    Some APC UPS units [apc.com] have an external connector normally used for disconnecting the built-in battery for safe shipping or in case of fire. By replacing the internal battery with a wire-loop, the external connector can be used to conveniently hook up large batteries. (Watch the polarity!)

    The SmartUPS 1400 model pictured is a 24 volt system, so 2 serially connected deep-cycle lead acid batteries must be used.

    ups1 [sjoholm.com]
    ups2 [sjoholm.com]

    This setup worked great during the recent hurricanes and power outages in Florida. It kept my laptop, cell phones and flashlights charged during the outages, the longest of which was about 5 days. During prolonged outages you would want to turn the UPS off, and only run it for an hour a day or so to charge smaller devices, check the news, etc.

  • by Myself ( 57572 ) on Sunday October 24, 2004 @03:24AM (#10612947) Journal
    Your car is a self-contained habitation module. Given a supply of dead dinosaurs, it'll produce plenty of heat and electricity. Here's how to get them out of the car and into your house. I haven't actually set this up yet but I've been considering it for a long time. Give a think to this plan:

    The electricity is pretty simple. Your stock alternator produces 14 volts DC at somewhere between 50 and 100 amps. After derating for alternator heating, and inverter losses, figure about 500 watts of useful continuous power, with momentary surge capacity of at least 2kW. Inverters that produce more than 100 watts or so should be wired straight in.

    For the heat, you'll need a way to circulate the engine's coolant into the house and back. Pick up a "radiator flush" kit at the auto store. It's a set of tee fittings that install inline with the radiator hoses, and have threads for garden hoses to screw on. Pick up a radiator from the junkyard, and a bunch of hose that can handle the temperature and pressure involved. Plumb your new radiator in parallel with the existing one.

    After filling the whole mess with coolant, doublecheck all your hoseclamps and start 'er up. As the engine heats up, the thermostat will open and both radiators should get warm. If you need to divert more flow to the external one, try pinching or adding a valve to one of the hoses. Put a small fan on your in-house radiator and voila!

    Now the only problem is that Murphy's law guarantees a power failure will happen when your tank is almost empty. Diesel keeps well, but gasoline turns to varnish after a few months in storage, so if you're going to keep a few gallons in a spare can, change it out regularly.

    (Please note: Make damn sure all your hoses and fittings can handle the temperatures and pressures involved. Check the coolant level after the bubbles work out. Keep an eye on engine temp if you choose to restrict the hose, and pay special attention if the engine's radiator fan comes on, which probably indicates inadequate coolant flow. Provide adequate airflow over the inverter's heatsink. Don't touch wiring with your hands covered in coolant. I'm not responsible if you blow yourself up.)

"Engineering without management is art." -- Jeff Johnson

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