Old fashioned oil lamp
These 2 together supply some comfortable light.
Old fashioned oil lamp
These 2 together supply some comfortable light.
Aladdin lamps.
These 2 together supply some comfortable light.
I've got oil lamps for long term light. The propane lamp lets you maintain that high voltage brightness during short term emergencies.
I have thought about a lever in .45LC.
Aladdin lamps are impressive pieces of kit. In terms of light output per unit of kerosene I've not seen anything come close.
These are handy for your storm shelter if you have young kids for a temporary outage as you ride out a storm.
Hard wire it into the electrical (NOT your room's switched fixture) and it will trickle charge. As soon as the house loses power, it automatically activates.
https://www.amazon.com/eTopLighting...f=sr_1_3?s=lamps-light&ie=UTF8&qid=1514210926
That actually is a really good idea, and an example of something that would be useful in the normally expected "little emergencies" - power outages, that you know are going to happen from time to time. I've got Coleman lanterns, oil lamps, oil lanterns, candles, and flashlights for long-term SHTF. But, if the power goes out for a couple hours some night, I'd still likely be fumbling for a flashlight in the spur of the moment.
I'm going to get one and install it next to my smoke detector in the little main hallway of our house.
I picked up one of the AA Seige at the Valpo Spring show last year.Streamlight Siege lanterns works very well. I believe they have 3 sizes, li-ion rechargable, D cells, AA cells.
I have several of the AA size (i use 3 eneloops). Built rugged. Has different brightness levels & red illumination. Some models have magnetic base. I find useful that the top can be easily removed and used as a broad floodlight. They are supposed to float in water only with top on. On/off button flashes when batteries get low. AA size about size of coke can.