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5 Comments

  1. No one knows whether the global catastrophe will happen, or whether humanity will continue to clear up the consequences of the global crisis in 2012, but one should be prepared for the worst.
    1. Create a food reserve. The cost of the consumer basket grows annually. Do your revenues keep up with her? Whatever the answer, start stocking non-perishables. Than collect money in a jug, it is better to create your own “survival fund”. Groats and canned food, salt, pasta will easily survive a couple of years in the closet.
    2. Water purification products. As you know, a person can do without food for several weeks, but only a few days without water. So you have to stock up on any means to get clean drinking water. There are many options: from portable or stationary filters to special tablets. It is worth having in stock several options for turning dirty water into drinking water.
    3. Build a library of craft books. If you have lost the habit of buying and reading books, hoping for the Internet, you should think about what will happen if a network outage begins. Or the electricity will just disappear. Therefore, it is worth starting to collect books about useful crafts and skills, as well as ways of survival. You can print texts from the web or collect books and video tutorials on your hard drive.

    Barbara from https://homeworkneeded.com

    1. I was curious about the “homeworkneeded” link above, and was very disappointed in what I discovered there. I was hoping to find some sort of posting for those who wish to work from home, but what I found was a completely unethical “write my paper” service marketed to students. I cannot imagine that this is a service that readers of Survivalblog would EVER utilize. I am shocked to find the link here on Survivalblog. The university I work for would certainly assign a grade of F for purchased work.

  2. I can recommend the Kenwood TS-480HX as a great mobile or home (shack) rig. I bought mine three years ago because it has a 200 watt output. I din’t want to fool with an external Linear Amplifier in a mobile environment. It has served me well. I plan to aquire another to set up as a “remote” rig to use over the internet as a back up plan. It very simple using “off the shelf” components from RemoteHam.com. If you need a built in auto tuner, you can get the TS-480SAT, however it is limited to 100 watts.

  3. the Kenwood TS-480HX will require an additional 12V supply to attain 200 Watts that’s (2) 12V DC supplies at about 25 amps each. Output Power is not what’s important. Go with an off-the-shelf 100 Watt HF radio; they are affordable and easy to operate. Which brand you ask? Well, that’s the Ford vs. Chevy vs. Dodge argument… do some research and find something that you understand when you read the manual (available online free)… performance comes when you are able to cut (make yourself) your own antenna. A $10,000 dollar rig is near worthless if paired with a bad antenna, whereas a resonant antenna makes a $1000 dollar radio work flawlessly! Cut the antenna to a band that is popular and has good propagation regardless of sunspots, like 20, 40 or 75 meter bands. 40 and 80 will usually always provide excellent regional coverage (40 daytime, 80 at night). Ii’ve been a licensed HAM for 22 years, Extra class and ARRL VE. Research pays huge dividends but you don’t have to break the bank to get a reliable, and affordable HF radio.

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