Anyone with an isolated wood who may need power will be interested in learning about the options of how to generate your own power, be it from generators, wind or solar.
Simon mentioned the following;
I have successfully charged batteries when away from the mains using an inverter and a 12-volt power source such as leisure batteries. A pure sine wave inverter is I think needed to operate the Makita charger properly.
I recently bought a generator (http://www.thegreenreaper.co.uk/Generat ... .4KVA.html) which I'm very pleased with. Note the voltage regulation feature which means it should be able to drive anything upto the power rating including items with 'sensitive' electronics (such as the Makita charger for instance). Note also the headline rating of 3.4kVA, not to be confused with the maximum wattage of the items it can power (2700). My best tip for generator use is a long cable so you can site the (noisy) generator away from where you're working. This one by the way adequately drives my 2200 watt electric log splitter
I chipped in thinking a diesel generator might be more cost effective as they can run off Red Diesel at a cost of around 67p / litre / hour.
I personally hadn't realised you can use 12v leisure batteries to power 240v devices, using an inverter. This then leads on to the question; if you had a 'green' source of power, such as a wind turbine or PV cells on a South facing roof (an option for me), couldn't you theoretically trickle charge a bank of 12v leisure batteries off a PV panel on the roof, then power any 240V tools or other devices using an inverter, hence being off grid and having 'free' solar 240V power? Sounds expensive to set up, but cool if viable.
How else does anyone else generate their power when required in their wood ?