No Power
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No Power
I've lost power at home. It went out Thursday evening at about 5 pm. So far it doesn't look like we are going to get it back for at least another 5 or 6 days.
So what is the longest you have ever been without power at home? My record so far is 10 days, that I remeber, and this one looks like it's going to tie that or even beat it.
I'm glad I have a generator big enough to power the hot water tank, at least I can shower.
RC
So what is the longest you have ever been without power at home? My record so far is 10 days, that I remeber, and this one looks like it's going to tie that or even beat it.
I'm glad I have a generator big enough to power the hot water tank, at least I can shower.
RC
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Well, we just had a big storm and the area had over 1 million customers without power the following morning. By the next day it was down to 300,000 to 400,000. The area I'm in got hit real bad. Just driving down the road you can see miles and miles of power cable on the ground and half a dozzen or more power poles broken.Krom wrote:WTF? How can they let it go out for that long? The longest it has been out here was less then a day. Even when someone crashed into and snapped the power pole in our front yard we sill had power back in a couple hours.
It might be a cold and dark Christmas.
Here are a few photos just off the end of my drive way. http://www.tcfw.net/storm/
RC
Yup, that's pretty bad. I detailed my misadventures in Redmond here. I feel guilty now because we got power back Saturday morning and I've been playing Xbox the whole time.
Technically work is open today, but there's absolutely no one here combined with the storm and holidays.
Technically work is open today, but there's absolutely no one here combined with the storm and holidays.
- CDN_Merlin
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During the Ice Storm of 1998?? Some people in Northern US and parts of Quebec were with no power for weeks. The storm had toppled like 40 massive Hydro towers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_Ice_Storm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_Ice_Storm
The bizzard of '93 knocked us out of power for a few days I think. I was about 7 years old at the time and I just remember my dad using the grill to cook our meals and using our gas heater for heat. I also remember how happy e veryone was when we finally got power back. Took forever for them to finally clear the roads.
Do you have a crack in your windshield? It is very dangerous to drive with a crack in the windshield - the windshield can break any time if you're driving faster.
I have never experienced a power outage more than a few minutes here, but there had been a flood in middle Germany this year where some people were left w/o power for days, too.
I hope I will never experience something like that. Particularly in winter (though I bet it's way colder over where you live than it is ever here. I live near the warmest area in Germany. My father in law even has Kiwi fruit in the garden).
I have never experienced a power outage more than a few minutes here, but there had been a flood in middle Germany this year where some people were left w/o power for days, too.
I hope I will never experience something like that. Particularly in winter (though I bet it's way colder over where you live than it is ever here. I live near the warmest area in Germany. My father in law even has Kiwi fruit in the garden).
Diedel wrote:Do you have a crack in your windshield? It is very dangerous to drive with a crack in the windshield - the windshield can break any time if you're driving faster.
lol, i was going to say "nice crack in the windshield"
anyways, back on topic. longest i went without power was when Hurricane Opal struck GA back in 95 ( i think its 95) anyways, i was out at a outdoor like adventure camp and the main building lost power for about a week and a half. the place had a backup generator but a hooooge tree smashed it into the ground. we were cut off pretty much. the only road in and out had a nice stream and bridge that collapsed.
Hey Richard, whats that first pic? wires arcing on the ground?
That's very common in most areas of the US. Lots of gravel on some roads -- trucks pick it up w/ their tires and sling-shoot the stones at windshields. It's less dangerous than it looks (besides beeing annoying if the crack is in your field of vision), the US has stricter standarts for windshields and a lower speed limit..Diedel wrote:Do you have a crack in your windshield? It is very dangerous to drive with a crack in the windshield - the windshield can break any time if you're driving faster.
- Krom
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:mrgreen:ZOMG RC DID YOU KNOW YOU HAVE A CRACK IN YOUR WINDSHIELD??!!?!one!!1oneeleven
I think he knows.
Windshields won't just break apart because they have cracks in them, even if you drive fast. They are made from laminated glass to avoid that type of breakage. Though I'm sure he will replace the windshield because one can get a ticket (in most places) for driving with a cracked windshield.
So what fell on the windshield RC?
Hey, RC. Take care of yourself up there!
Longest I've been without juice was back about '98 or so. I think it was out 2-3 days. We had about 14 inches of rain over a 24 hour period and the local transformers were all flooded. The park across the street was turned into a huge lake for about a week or so.
Longest I've been without juice was back about '98 or so. I think it was out 2-3 days. We had about 14 inches of rain over a 24 hour period and the local transformers were all flooded. The park across the street was turned into a huge lake for about a week or so.
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I'm just south of Seattle. It's a very nice area, normally, but right now it looks a bit like a war zone.
That first photo is one of the power lines that was hanging from the pole and blowing in the wind. It kept hitting the ground and arc'n. It sounded just like an arc welder. I was standing about 50 yards from it when I took that photo. That was about 6 pm but the worst of the storm hit over night.
I wish I took a few more photos. Those are with in about 2 miles of my house. We had a good number of trees down in our yards and several trees that I had to cut just to get out. Their is going to be a lot of free fire wood if you just want to get out and cut it up.
Yes, the wind shield is cracked in the car. A rock chipped it a few weeks ago and then we had a good freeze and that caused the crack.
RC
That first photo is one of the power lines that was hanging from the pole and blowing in the wind. It kept hitting the ground and arc'n. It sounded just like an arc welder. I was standing about 50 yards from it when I took that photo. That was about 6 pm but the worst of the storm hit over night.
I wish I took a few more photos. Those are with in about 2 miles of my house. We had a good number of trees down in our yards and several trees that I had to cut just to get out. Their is going to be a lot of free fire wood if you just want to get out and cut it up.
Yes, the wind shield is cracked in the car. A rock chipped it a few weeks ago and then we had a good freeze and that caused the crack.
RC
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We just got power back last night at about 1:30 am. So, that was close to 5 1/2 days or 112 hours. We were burning about 15 gallons of gas a day in our generators at almost $2.60 a gallon just to keep the lights, fridges / freezers (two of each), some heat, and sometime the hot water on. It sure got expensive. Of course we shut down everything at night to conserve fuel but the house sure gets cold at night.
One of my generators blew off its muffler. I wasn't about to shut it down just for that. It’s the one with the remote twenty gallon tank so it could run 40 to 50 hours with out having to stop for fuel, in fact since the tank is remote it can be fueled while it’s running. My wife, daughter, sister and her two kids were relying on it to keep them warm when someone couldn’t be there to fuel and restart the other generator that has a much smaller tank. We just lived with the noise. Looks like the threads are stripped out of manifold so I’m not sure how I’m going to fix it.
We will be reviewing our disaster readiness plans as a family. This was just a small disaster compared to how bad it could have been. Hopefully we never have to experience another disaster as bad as this but chances are we will with the possibility of earth quakes, storms, terrorists, or a number of other possibilities.
Here are a couple questions for you:
Do you have a disaster plan for you or your family?
What do you think you need to have on hand for large emergencies or disasters?
Are you ready?
Now it’s time for us restock all of the supplies we used up like propane, food, firewood, and batteries.
RC
One of my generators blew off its muffler. I wasn't about to shut it down just for that. It’s the one with the remote twenty gallon tank so it could run 40 to 50 hours with out having to stop for fuel, in fact since the tank is remote it can be fueled while it’s running. My wife, daughter, sister and her two kids were relying on it to keep them warm when someone couldn’t be there to fuel and restart the other generator that has a much smaller tank. We just lived with the noise. Looks like the threads are stripped out of manifold so I’m not sure how I’m going to fix it.
We will be reviewing our disaster readiness plans as a family. This was just a small disaster compared to how bad it could have been. Hopefully we never have to experience another disaster as bad as this but chances are we will with the possibility of earth quakes, storms, terrorists, or a number of other possibilities.
Here are a couple questions for you:
Do you have a disaster plan for you or your family?
What do you think you need to have on hand for large emergencies or disasters?
Are you ready?
Now it’s time for us restock all of the supplies we used up like propane, food, firewood, and batteries.
RC
- Krom
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I was thinking the same thing, we don't really have a disaster plan, but when the world gets taken over by zombies I am going to run wild!
Though really the only disasters that could strike here would be a tornados, house fires and celestial objects. We are in a location that is free from terrorists, floods, forest fires, earthquakes and hurricanes.
Though really the only disasters that could strike here would be a tornados, house fires and celestial objects. We are in a location that is free from terrorists, floods, forest fires, earthquakes and hurricanes.
Heli-CoilRichard Cranium wrote:Looks like the threads are stripped out of manifold so I’m not sure how I’m going to fix it.
- Krom
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I live in the middle of some corn fields, which eliminates forest fires, in northern Wisconsin which eliminates earthquakes, on high ground which eliminates floods, and miles from the nearest \"settlement\" which eliminates terrorists.
I supposed I should add ice storms to one of the possible disasters that can strike here. We have had those before.
I supposed I should add ice storms to one of the possible disasters that can strike here. We have had those before.
No, he lives in the Land of Hilly Fruity Pebbles. It's very hilly and the trees looked like the cereal when I went through it in late September.Duper wrote:Dude, are posting from the moon???Krom wrote:... We are in a location that is free from terrorists, floods, forest fires, earthquakes and hurricanes.
There are beefier types of inserts out there, too. I'd say that you cheapest solution (assuming you don't already have tooling) would be to drill & tap in the next step up for hardware size- redrilling the thru hole to allow the upsized hardware to fit. McMaster-Carr is your friend.Grendel wrote:Heli-CoilRichard Cranium wrote:Looks like the threads are stripped out of manifold so I’m not sure how I’m going to fix it.