> bathroom light
Yes. Absolutely yes.
I actually went one beyond this. I installed a 5KW UPS in my house which has an output to a breaker panel. This powers my televisions, cable boxes, and cordless phones, and also the night-light in my bathroom fan. I put an LED bulb in there, and it stays on 24x7. Just enough light to do whatever you need, and it's come in real handy for those midnight trips leading little children to the potty.
> outside light, cause you know the thieves will be out, I mean everyone is in
> a hotel across town with power, if its going to be a battery start unit, a
> plug for the charger of the battery so it can restart, how about a Light
> where the Generator is so you can see to check on it, top off the fuel
> without holding the flashlight in your mouth.
No, and kinda.
Too many lights on makes everyone know just who owns that generator that is making all that noise. You do have a cable to lock up your generator, right? They're worth much more on CraigsList when the power is out, if you get my drift.
I have a shop light by the generator, but I leave it off when I'm not around.
Certainly having an outlet near the generator is a must, but most already come with that.
> where are the cars? how about 1 garage door opener so you can get in or
> out of the garage to go get more fuel, food or whatever.
Good point, but for me, I don't park in my detached garage. When the power is out, I just use the side door.
> Oh most definatly, a plug for a radio or small TV so you know whats
> happening out there, and keep a old fashion phone that actually plugs in,
> cause the cordless wont work with no power.[/QUOTE]
My priorities for generator power
Heat and hot water
Refrigerator and chest freezer
Television, cable, phone and internet for the wife's sanity
Outlets to power my cordless tool chargers (so I can recharge their flashlights)
everything else (I have a gas range, and matches handy, so that's not a big deal for me).
Lighting isn't a large concern. I've got several oil lamps from before I owned a generator (my block's power has been very bad for a long time), and the flicker of the oil lamps doesn't alert anyone that you have power.
BTW, there is a Panasonic cordless multi-phone setup with a nifty battery backup solution. When the power is out, you leave one phone in the central base, and that phone's battery powers the base. Also, these newer DECT phones draw very little power, and the Panasonic ones use a pair of AAA rechargeable batteries, BUT you can run them on regular AAA batteries, so long as you do not put them on a charging base. You should actually get a few days on a pair of batteries.