I can use it in our community emergency medical facility. I am in the process of fitting a group 27 LTH battery for lighting, and a pair of 30 watt LED 5500K chips for operating room grade lighting (a 1 hour Intermatic spring wound timer wall control).
Stitches, scorpion stings to infants, and a plethora of other problems, like burns, broken bone setting, is done by a local MD who of all things lives in a tiny Prowler trailer, and practices in the town of La Mira 28 km distant.
The Ship-To point would be a UPS store in Chula Vista CA 91910.
What the converter cannot do, my MegaWatt can.
Why is it 70% of the local emergencies happen when we have power outages? The structure is about 1 km from my house so I can keep an eye on things. If crooks break in, they are in for a shock, the battery is encased in barbed wire powered with one hell of an electric fence charger, and Harbor Fright inverter.
EDIT:
It is federal Mexican law that doctors and clinics must render aid at no cost to a patient so as to stabilize them enough to get to a regular medical facility of their choice. In hurricane season (right now) it is common for Mex 200 to get blocked by mud or the low section near Acalpican to get flooded with two feet of water covering the highway. Juicy gossip has it the doctor decided to "move" away from his wife. Something to do with lipstick on the collar. The trailer is less than 20' long and packed with his personal gear.