DIY Farday Cage: EMP Protection


What is a Faraday cage?

It is a device that allows you to shield electronic devices from an EMP, which will destroy unprotected items such as radios, walkie-talkies, anything with circuitry.  Simply it absorbs the charged particles and directs them into the ground like a lighting rod.  I talk more about this in my podcast on this very subject.

 

Building a Closed Faraday Cage

The difference is with this one, it is sealed and cannot be opened and closed at will, you put in what you want now, seal it and open it when you need it, not whenever you want.

Items you will need

  • A Large Roll of unpainted aluminum window screen.
  • 2×200′ boxes of Aluminum Foil & Saran Wrap (Hit up Costco/Sams Club)
  • Heavy Duty Garbage Bags
  • 1 Box Small & Large Ziploc Freezer Bags
  • 150′ Industrial Grade Duct Tape
  • 50′ Electrical Tape
  • Heavy Gauge 3 Prong Grounded Power Cord (Use old Surge Protector, Buy one or use old computer power cord)
  • 1 Pack Desiccant Silica Gel
  • Cardboard

 

 Step 1:

Get together all the items you want to protect (remember you cant just get into this whenever you want, so make sure these items are not needed daily/weekly/monthly).  Remove all batteries and store them in ziploc bags (if you leave them in the electronics they will eventually leak and destroy the item.  I would put in rechargeable batteries with the charger for whatever you are using. Try to vaccum seal all the items and then place them ziploc bags if you can, if not just try to get the air out of the ziploc bags.

Sidenote: Eneloop Batteries are some of the best ones out there, they are Low discharge, pre-charged batteries, so they lose their charge very slowly and probably will still have a decent charge when you open the case.  I use a Energizer Family recharger as well, it fits all the rechargeables i use from AAA to D

 

Step 2:

Once the items are sealed in the bags, wrap them in 3-5 layers of plastic and 3-5 layers of Aluminum foil in alternating layers, plastic wrap should be the inner and outermost layer.

 

Step 3:

Seal each wrapped item in a zip loc or garbage bag.

Step 4:

If you are using a steel garbage can remove the handles from the side of the can, spread them open and pull them off.  If its an ammo can, sand or grind the paint off of the lips of the container and lid and if the rubber gasket is till present, remove it and scrape away the remnants.

 

Step 5:

Use strip of aluminum foil to fill any gaps that may be between the seams of metal, even areas where the metal is stamped together or there is a seam there may be small gaps, fill them with aluminum foil will make sure there no gaps in the conductivity of your outer container.

 

Step 6:

You can line the inside of the can with cardboard or place the items in a cardboard/plastic bin/box

Open and place the desiccant pack(s) place in the container with the items.

 

Step 7:

Use one long unbroken strip of aluminum foil to create a conductive metal gasket (fold the foil to make it 3-5 layers thick) around the lip of the container, this will ensure a tight fitting conducting lid.

 

Step 8:

Secure the lid on the metal container and make sure its a tight seal.  If you’re using a garbage can use 2-4 small strips of duct tape to make sure the lid is secured in place, but not too much.

 

Step 9:

Wrap the whole container with at least 3 layers of foil, you can use a small amount of tap to secure the foil in place, but you want AS MUCH of the metal surface as possible exposed.

 

Step 10:

This part is more difficult, once you have it wrapped in aluminum foil you must wrap the entire thing in the aluminum screen.  According to the site i went to for this his opinion was to wrap the top and bottom first, vertical first then wrap the body horizontally.  Make sure the screen overlaps so that there arent any gaps, you can use duct tape to hold it in place

 

Step 11:

Get A Piece of Copper Wire long enough to reach a grounding rod that you have driven into the ground outside.  Some say you dont need a grounding rod, but I am still convinced that you do to make it work as effectively as possible.  Do NOT ground it to the grid or your house! Find an exposed section of aluminum screen near the bottom of the cage, use a protuding section of the screen.  Poke two small holes in the screen about an inch apart and feed the exposed copper wire in through one hole and back out through the next.  Then twist it around itself to hold it in place.  Feed this to the Grounding Rod and Clamp it to the rod.

 

Notes:

The Post previously mentioned using a electrical cord and plugging the ground into a wall socket.  This was brought to my attention by a reader named “Ron”.  Upon further investigation I believe that he is correct.  I apologize

 

 

Also Here is a neat Faraday Cage made from a Metal Cabinet bought on Craigslist.


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Lights Out: Book Review

 

“Lights Out” is a prepper fiction novel I read long before I started this site, most of you may already know it, for those who havent, here is my take.

Lights out starts out with the main character Mark at work, when suddenly the lights go out, some sort of EMP has taken out the power grid, things are unknown at first and the normalcy of life is suddenly yanked out from underneath everyone and no one knows what to do.  Without giving too much of the story away Mark and his family have a decision to make, stay put and make do or leave to meet up with his prepper brother.  The family and community that comes to be almost a family, has to deal with opportunistic thieves and pillaging gangs, as well as deal with the day to day things that keep life going, short and long term.

 

THREE THINGS I LIKED

  • Excellent storytelling, very good character development. Some books you read, especially in the Prepper Fiction, the story may be good, but the character development and the “suck you in” factor may be lacking.  I have read this book 2 times, and i still really get sucked in.
  • Fairly realistic as far as the challenges you would face when building a community out of a loose conglomeration of families who happen to live in a neighborhood.  You have issues with people’s ego’s you have issues with the elderly, you have issues with food, water, defense.  All of these things will be very important and difficult to deal with, and this book covers that, while other prepper fiction novels will focus on the mountaintop retreat, or that someone in the community already has 5 years of food for 20 people.
  • The fact that Law enforcement is still around.  Too many books out there paint a scenario of “things have broken down, now there are no stores, no cops, nothing”.  This COULD be a possibility, however some facets of government will still be in place, and will continue to be, especially in a partial collapse.  This also illustrates well, how even though the SHTF, you could still be arrested for doing something stupid or shooting an armed gang member, so act intelligently.

THREE THINGS I DIDNT LIKE

  • There was a bit of the storyline filler of things falling into place, to make transitions in the book easier.  The town had a agriculture expert, were able to get a tractor, were able to get a combat vet who was able to train a large guard force in the town.  Its not unbelievable, but it did make it seem less….real.
  • Without giving away the story, the chance the main characters families had to move to the compound, should have done that. Smarter move, however the story makes it seem like a smart move i still feel as though that area could have been defended well regardless of the some opinions in the book.  You can love your wife and respect her, but when it comes to my families lives, safety trumps feelings.  This isnt a hit on the book, just more the main characters thinking.
  • The main protagonist was a bit on the unbelievable side in what he was able to accomplish, however it does work to illustrate how community building as well as individual relationships need to be approached in even a more careful way to avoid tragic clashes as often there can be “too many chiefs”.

Overall I loved the book, like I said I have read it twice, and its reception and popularity amongst the community also shows that I am not alone.  This book is not like Rawles novels in that it doesnt interject alot of information into the story, so this is more of a “entertainment” read more than a instruction manual with a storyline. If you asked me to recommend 3 prepper fiction novels to you, this would be one of them.

Head over to Amazon to pick up this book today

It is also available on the kindle

 

* These links are amazon affiliate links and this site gets a small percentage of the total sale if you purchase it which helps to defray the cost of the site, forum and podcast*

 

 


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Product Review: Sylvania Solar LED Flashlight

So I bought this Light off of Amazon awhile ago to do a review, and had shelved it and forgotten about it!

 

SPECS:

  • 2 Bright White LED’s
  • Charges with Direct of Indirect Sunlight
  • Will last between 1.2-2 hours per full charge
  • Holds Charge for up to 30 days
  • Belt Clip
  • Slim Design
  • Length = 5 Inches, Width = 2 inches, Height = .5 Inches

Overall I am very happy with this light, I have been trying to switch all of my flashlights for Emergency use to Solar and/or LED’s for sustainability and energy efficiency.  Other than my Surefire lights for self-defense, i have pretty much done that, as you have seen alot of my reviews lately on different lights, they are all solar or crank powered and exclusively LED.


For this light, about once or twice a month I sit it on the windowsill during a sunny day to keep it charged, and have used it on a few occasions when looking for something in a closet or crawl space, nothing too extravagant or glorious, just everyday stuff!

I think this would make a good addition to your preps

Originally I bought it for $15.99 but it has been reduced to $10.14 currently.

 

*The links on this post are to an Amazon Affiliate Link which this site gets a small percentage of the total purchase, which helps to defray the cost of operating*


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Power outages in India A harbinger for the US? (Plus a free e-book!)

Did you hear about the recent electricity outages in India…almost 700 million people without power for days, still. Everyone is blaming the electricity producers and power plants for not keeping up their grid equipment.
But, a few years ago, India’s government bought into the global warming argument that coal mines and coal powered electrical plants were the biggest contributor to global warming, so they legislated bills that closed the majority of their coal mines and made it harder for electricity producers to use coal to generate electricity. Thus their power grid eventually failed.
Last week the executive office of the president increased regulations that have already closed or reduced major coal mines in Brilliant, Ohio (over 190 jobs) and the Arch Coal Co (750 jobs) in Kentucky, Virgina and WV…the result of these regulations is projected to be the reduction of electricity production in the US of 8%.
I love clean air, I love clean water, I love the woods I love pristine wilderness…
But really? we are demanding more so we decide to reduce our available energy? This truly is slow suicide!
Some can say the only way to be more Green is to force the public to use less….unfortunately just providing less power doesnt do that, it leads to issues like what we see in India, overloads and massive rolling brownouts or blackouts!
On the bright side…
There is a free kindle/ebook on Amazon on basic survival and tips for almost any situation follow the link here and download it for free!

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Forgotten Prepping Items

While reading a Blog article on alt-market.com I came across some of the things i had talked about in my Barter Section, and others I had not thought of.

While the article goes off into the hinterlands of the tinfoil hat on some subjects in my opinion, there was also some great “oh yeah’s” in there as well.

Before I go on lets briefly go over the tinfoil hat comment i made and why i made it.

Mostly I was addressing the NBC and Gas mask items.

Now I know that as preppers we are prepared for any event, and I have often said this, Prepare for any disaster and you will be prepared for all.

I dont have a problem with anyone getting gas masks, decontamination kits, nbc alert systems, etc. If you feel you want to, go ahead an do it, but in my opinion on the list of “must haves” these are pretty low.  Yes Fukushima taught us a lesson, but for me that lesson was community trumps all, the Japanese people banded together, made sacrifices and have survived and thrived after it.  But folks, if you have had any training in Nuclear, Biological and Chemical disasters and the warfare associated with it, having a suit and mask isnt going to do it.  If some rogue terrorist or worse “totalitarian government” decided to spray a chemical agent over you section of town or city, everything you own is going to be contaminated and useless, now you have a great suit and no preps.  Many BIO-agents have no smell and no dark cloud to signal its approach, its there and without sophisticated equipment you wont know its there.  Blood agents are the worst (such as the famous VX in the movie “The Rock”) and kill nearly instantly with no precursor.  Radiological agents are pervasive and will infect everything you own as well.  In short unless you live within a hundred miles or less of a reactor this is not anything you should worry about.

If you dont have your food preps handled, I would say farther along than 2 years per person, dont worry about this stuff!  This is the, I have a retreat bought and paid for, cisterns built, large permaculture gardens finished and years of food preps put away, and now i want to buy the just in case stuff type of purchases.

Ok….now onto the good stuff

1) Extra First Aid Supplies.  I talked about this in my Medical section, but you need to have extra First aid supplies in the forms of Gauze, anti-biotics, ointments and other essentials, past the what i need for my family amounts.  With one severe injury from a axe when your cutting wood you could go through two or three first aid kits supplies of gauze and like materials.  Stock up!

2) Solar Panels.  Now this isnt a “Forgotten item” but many preppers look at it as a…when i get my retreat ill buy them….type of purchase.  Dont do that!  They are not a money saver even over the 30 year mark, however they are renewable for decades and a great purchase to have if you find youreself in a situation like India is right now where half the country is out of power!  At least get a small battery backup and solar panel kit to recharge batteries and other devices.

3) Raw Building Materials. This was one that i really went “Oh yeah!”.  So now the world as we know it has ended and you want to build that greenhouse youve always needed or a root cellar to store your food…but the Lowes is long gone..now what?  Well having a good amount of stored nails, lumber, screws even iron and steel could make the difference between dreams and reality, and some cases life and death.  Making homemade lumber is almost a lost art and tedious process even in the days when it was the norm, and most likely you dont have the tools for that as well.  Look at having extra saw blades, large two man tree saws (like you see in old timey photos), bags of concrete, sealants  or even extra material to make new window screens or repair them.

4)  Extra “survival” clothing.  If you live in the North like we do, then clothing is very important, having extra thermal layers, wool clothing and winter boots are a must.  You cant expect your clothes to last you 10 years or a pair of boots lasting 5 in the “new world”, since the last pair you had probably didnt get the amount of work then as it would in that future.  Stock up on all those things!

 

That being said there are a hundred other things, but I hope that this was a good primer for your brain to start thinking of those items that you need everyday and may have forgotten about in your preps!

 

GREAT NORTHERN PREPPER OUT!


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Candle making: Candles from old Crayolas

(An awesome post from Charearl.com)

If you have children in your home, chances are you have an abundance of worn down crayons that don’t get used much anymore. Before throwing them out and buying new ones, consider using them to make candles. This can be a great way to turn them into something new and bright again. Most children will love the idea of creating candles with you and enjoy knowing their old crayons helped create them. Making candles out of crayons can also be a great gift giving idea.

Before you get started, discuss safety with your children. Since the crayons will have to be melted at a very high heat, they will not be able to participate in that portion of the candle making process. Assure them that there are many other aspects of the candle making that they can be a part of.

To start, gather your supplies.

In addition to the crayons, you will need a wax carton. This can be from milk, fabric softener, or orange juice.

You will also need paraffin wax,

two full ice cube trays,

a double boiler

(If you don’t want to use your double boiler an old coffee can and a saucepan will work just as well.)

and white packing string.

Trim the top off of the wax carton, leaving it approximately six inches high. You will want to cut the string at least 8 inches long. You will later cut the wick to fit the holder. To ensure a wick that burns easier take three pieces and bread them together. Use smaller pieces of string to tie the ends together. The holders for your candles can be anything you desire as long as they are non-flammable. Pretty vases, glasses, and jars work nicely.

Melt about three pounds of paraffin wax in the double boiler or coffee can. To help it melt faster, cut it into small chunks. The melting process with take about fifteen to twenty minutes. While the wax is melting, peel the papers off of the old crayons. You and your children can choose to separate the colors by lights and darks to have a mix that melds well or you can mix it all together and see what the color ends up being.

For best results, only add the crayons to the wax after it has completely melted.

Dip the string in paraffin so that it is coated, hold the string in the middle of the carton and fill with the ice cubes.

After the crayons and wax have both melted together, immediately remove the mixture from the stove and pour into your candle holders. If you would like to make scented candles try adding a splash of cinnamon or vanilla to your hot wax mixture.  Pour off the water as the candle dries

It is important that the candles by left alone to completely harden. Make sure you have an area this can be done without disruption. It is also important to make sure small children can’t reach them, as out of curiosity they may want to check on their candles. The wax will stay hot for several hours and can scold the skin.

Making candles out of old crayons is a great way to spend the afternoon creating a neat project with your children. This process can also be done at schools and childcare centers with old crayons as presents for parents. Simply allow each child to decorate the outside of their candle holder while adults complete the rest of the process.

 

GREAT NORTHERN PREPPER OUT!


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Candle Making: Candles from Fish

The Eulachon also known as the “Hooligan” or “Candle Fish”

The Candle Fish is  a small fish, smelt (6-10 inches long) that is found along the Pacific Coast of North America, from Northern California North to Oregon, Washington, British Columbia to Alaska.

The reason they are called “candlefish” is due to the fact that they get so fact during spawning with 15% of their body weight deriving from fat.

The Candle Fish does not hone in on a specific stream to spawn as salmon do, and spends the majority of its life in the ocean.

ALASKA

  • SOUTHEAST ALASKA: Main Spawning Migration can occur as early as April
  • CENTRAL/WESTERN: MAY, Turnagain Arm/20 mile River-Late April Early may
  • CHILKAT, ALSEK & COPPER RIVER: Occasional winter runs in January and February when temperatures are right.
  • Some Streams have seperate overlapping migrations

CANADA

  • 33 rivers documented, 15 consistent rivers used
  • Nass, Kitimat, Kemano/Wahoo, Kingome, Kitimat, Bella Coola, Kiliniklini, Skeena, Kinsquit, Fraser, Kildala, Chuckwall/Kil bella, Kitlop, Kowesas, Wannock
  • Nass, Fraser, Skeena and Klinaklini Rivers are the major spawning grounds
  • Eulachon enter lower reaches of rivers Late February to April.
  • Sampling through a Scientific study on the Fraser River showed highest concentrations on 18/19 April and falls off after (Spring 2009)
  • Northern BC Spawing takes place March and April- Canadian Study

Pacific Northwest

  • Columbia/Klamath Rivers: As early as December/January/March
  • Coastal Rivers of Washington/Oregon: April/May

 

Its a very simple procedure to help them live up to their name of “Candle Fish”.

 

1) You catch them

2)Dry them and string them on a wick or on a forked stick (as indigenous peoples did)

3) They can then be burned on a candle.

 

A Native American recipe to render the oil differs from one tribe to another.  The Hisla People of Kitamaat Village in B.C. Canada however use this recipe

“Their general recipe is to allow the fish to ripen for approximately two weeks under evergreen branches, cook the fish in fresh water, and then skim the oil from the surface of the water.  Specific recipes differ in the dumping and stirring of the fish, straining the carcasses, placing rocks in the water to reheat the mixture, and filtration methods.  Whatever method used that is unique to the individual tribe, those involved in making the oolichan grease were, and still are, proud of the end product.  The grease was, and still is, shared and sometimes given away as a gift.  The valuable and nutritious end product is used on many foods;  salmon, halibut, herring roe, and  berries, similar to the way butter is used.  The grease was used for trade with other First Nations that did not harvest oolichan.”

Taken from “whatscookingamerica.net”

 

GREAT NORTHERN PREPPER OUT!

 

 

 

 


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ETON RAPTOR Product Review

I received the Eton Raptor Brand New in the Box

It is about the size of a large 20 oz Coke, and weighs in at around 11oz

Features:

  • AM/FM Weather Band Radio
  • Altimeter
  • Barometer
  • Compass
  • Chronograph
  • Alarm
  • Enhanced Monocrystal Solar Panel
  • USB Cellphone charger
  • audio input (to play your mp3 player if you wish)
  • Headphone Jack
  • LED light

Radio:

The Radio is unique and helpful in that you can scan AM (520-1710khz) and FM (87.5-108mhz) if you want to listen to your favorite stations and want some music for your hike or wherever you are.  Made a nice compact player to listen to some music during the cooking portion of the camping trip.  The Raptor has a collapsible and moveable antenna that folds up along the carabiner at the top to keep it from being in the way or being broke easily.

My favorite feature is the 7 NOAA weather channel, It covers

  • 162.400
  • 162.425
  • 162.450
  • 162.475
  • 162.500
  • 162.525
  • 162.550

The feature that is most helpful is the Weather alert function in that you tune into whatever station comes in the clearest (not all stations come in wherever you are) and press the memory button and the raptor stores the station with the “Alert” function activated.  This is so that if you are out in the wilderness in the middle of nowhere and a major storm is approaching the radio will turn on automatically and play the alert and weather information! So if you were in a valley 100 miles from the nearest town and a major rainstorm is approaching the radio will just turn on, on it own and let play the weather alert over the radio so you aren’t caught off guard!

Altimeter:

The altimeter function is useful for numerous reasons. One being you can use this to plot a more exact area of where you are based on the map data or if you just want to keep a running track of the heights you ascended and descended throughout your trip on the included Altimeter Log.

Compass:

To be honest i’ve never been a big fan of digital compasses as they aren’t as “accurate” as a handheld compass for use with gaining your exact position through triangulation if you get turned around.  Most peoples navigate the back-country on used and marked trails, but many of us still head out and hike wherever the land takes us.  For a Bug Out scenario you may need to head into the woods to reach your location and want/need to avoid common areas.  For this you will need to use triangulation and dead reckoning using known landmarks (which with the mountains in most Alaskan areas isn’t difficult).  For general bearing this compass will be fine, but i still would recommend, no implore! you to have a lensatic compass (i use a military lensatic with Tritium, its spendy but worth it) as the primary and backup regardless.  I will say that the nice thing about digital compasses is that they aren’t as susceptible to being interfered with by metal that may be on your body (weapon anyone?), but that is easily overcome with attention to detail.

Barometer:

An excellent tool to have, the Eton Raptor has a function that gives you the current Barometric pressure as well as a simple symbol to let you know whether it is

  • rainy(pressure is low or getting low, implies it is raining or going to rain)
  • cloudy (low barometric pressure, indicates possibility of rain)
  • partial cloudy (Pressure is getting lower or higher, indicates unstable weather)
  • sunny (high barometric pressure, indicates good weather)

Chronograph:

Can be used for a variety of purposes, one may to assist in land navigation using timed movements to help in your more accurate movement from place to place.

Alarm:

So you don’t sleep through your 5am wake up, or a weather check in the night, or even to wake up the next member of your party who is on watch.  Alarm 1 has a slower high pitch beep, while Alarm 2 has the more standard “beep beep” in quick succession also high pitched.

Solar Panel:

The Solar Panel Located on the back of the Raptor has a 5V, 500mA array about the same size as three oreo cookies placed in a line.  Specs say that it takes about 18 hours of direct sunlight to fully charge the raptor’s 1800 mAh rechargeable lithium ion battery.  It will work without a full charge, but obviously it does not last as long.  Included is a USB chargin cable that you can plug into your computer or wall USB charger that will put it up to full capacity in about 4 hours.  I dont have specific drain data, as it all depends on your uses.  If its just for listening to radio alerts and the occasional bearing this thing will last awhile, and with smart placement of the solar panel it could charge for your use during the day.  if you use it to play your mp3 and charge your phone…well you can guess its just not going to last that long!

 

Other Features:

USB charger: This is useful for those of you who CANT be without your phones/ipod’s in the field! for myself i don’t see alot of use for it, save for the charging or recharging of your phone for dire need, but this isn’t a product defect, just a personal choice.

LED light: The light is good for camp use to find something lost in a bag, tent or nearby the campsite, not to spotlight game or for anything long range (duh!).  It is nice to have and the LED’s make it a low drain light, which is excellent.

Audio/Headphone Jacks: The audio input jacks allow you to have a small speaker to blast your Ipod, if you so wish, but this will drain the power out of the Raptor and could leave you in a lurch if you drain it dead and its cloudy the next day.  The headphone jacks are a neat feature, so you can listen to the radio or weather channels without blasting it through the speaker, and/or need to keep a low profile.  The Raptor has volume buttons so either way you can control the volume whether its out of the speaker or headphones

Carabiner/Bottle Opener:  The Carabiner gives you the ability to clip it onto your gear or pack so its accessible but doesnt get lost, along with a hole in the swivel to attach paracord for extra reliability.  The Raptor also has a bottle opener for those of us who may want to enjoy a brew or two on a family camping trip!

 

Overall i like the the Eton Raptor, Its 99 dollar price tag could scare some customers away, But it is a useful little item if not for anything other than its radio and Weather band capabilities and solar recharging.  I wish it had a simple GPS included in it so that it could be more of a all in one basic tool.  It would do nicely in a 72 hour kit (paint the colored plastic black for a lower profile though) that you could throw in there and forget it, recharge on occasion, but is always there.  It does take about 30 minutes of fiddling with the thing and reading the manual, and a few moments of “Wait…how does this…what the…ohhhhh!” but once you master it, its a neat little tool.

Would i recommend it?  Overall Yes, but I would also put the caveat in there that you should have a good compass and proper mastery of land navigation (ie magnetic declinations, dead reckoning, how to read topo maps and have them, etc.). This would be a great thing for the average hiker and day camper, and even the weekend hunter.  For Bug out, its nice because of its light weight and solar capability.  Eton also sells the “Scorpion” which is smaller has hand crank and solar charging capability, but only has the radio and LED functions, but comes in at around $50, so if price is an issue then that may be a better bet.

 

GREAT NORTHERN PREPPER OUT!

Remember to visit the FORUM

 


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The Great Northern Prepper-Gasification-Interview with Dr. Andy Soria

Okay folks!

Here it as after so much waiting!  It took forever to edit, and there were some technical malfunctions that were completely my fault and wont happen again on future video

When i came into the interview I was very much in love with gasification, I still am, but see its true use instead of its hyped use.

Gasification has alot of promise for your community as a great way to heat your home and water using infloor heating or old fashioned radiators! If you have any questions shoot them my way and

I will be happy to get them answered!

rmorgan@greatnorthernprepper.com

 

 

CHECK OUT OUR SECTION ON GASIFICATION ON THE MAIN PAGE!

 

GREAT NORTHERN PREPPER OUT!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAqTlfgLHY8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtiRHZHTMPI&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-dqHWmQF4U&feature=relmfu

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tDT_aaoPfw&feature=relmfu

 


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