User Panel
Posted: 8/25/2023 2:37:22 PM EST
Please stay the f out of the coned, taped off and unsafe area you stupid mo fo and that includes your dogs, vehicles, golf carts and so on too. Don't walk by it, over it, or under it, especially when the stupid old fvck of the neighborhood grabbed it earlier and pronounced it "safe." It's primary and they are doing sub work and the line fuses are NOT open.
I have no idea how the Gen pop actually survives one day after a storm without power. PS, we really got a slammed locally, straight line winds were brutal in places. And no, unfortunately, few of us know when you personally will get your power back on. I wish I knew and I'd tell you if I knew, but I don't. |
|
Would my Klein non-contact tester detect this?
It's good to 1000V. |
|
Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines?
We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. |
|
grabbed it earlier and pronounced it "safe." View Quote Does he have a YouTube channel? |
|
|
Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. View Quote That’s a very ignorant statement. |
|
To be fair, yellow tape usually means caution. Red tape usually means stay out.
Fuck messing with downed wires though. Anyone not professionally involved in the repairs doing that is an idiot. |
|
Teen electrocuted by downed power line |
|
Electricity scares the poop out of me. I don't understand it, I can't see it. I can't kill it with a shotgun.
I've made it to 58 years old by staying away, and calling the pros. Don't plan on changing that. I don't know what will kill me, but it is likely not electricity. Fair enough. |
|
When you watch an idiot drive over your cones blocking the street and then over the 5 inch supply line from the hydrant to the pumper at an active fire scene. Nothing should surprise us anymore.
|
|
Quoted: Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. That’s a very ignorant statement. Yep. I have a couple pieces of sidewalk glass from a #6 cu. 12kv line (7200) where the fuse never cleared . When our trouble shooter pulled up the sidewalk was basically on fire. I guess there wasn't enough resistance to clear the 80T fuse. |
|
I called in a downed power line that was a jumpin and a sparkin then restin the jumpin and sparkin.
I said its either 3 or 4 (short length) blocks up from me , that's as close as i'm getting. Should be able to detect it. |
|
|
|
Would it be wrong to suggest "Hand me that wire and I can get your power back on in an instant"?
|
|
Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. View Quote The “poco guy” is a dangerous idiot. I’ve worked in an industry with lines on poles for 25 years. When I was a fiber tech doing restoration work after hurricanes Charlie and Ivan we found energized power lines on the ground many many times days after the storms had passed. Home owners connecting generators up without a bypass / disconnect is a massive danger. If you don’t know what you’re looking at or doing stay the fuck away from it. |
|
I just came back from Brighton Mi and the downed trees along 96 was impressive. Had to detour around one section of 96, closed for unrelated issues I think) but passed a farm that had several buildings missing roofs and/or walls. Really feel bad for that family as they could have lost everything.
Passed a couple corn fields where the corn was just laid down by the winds, haven’t seen that before. I would have to think there were tornados in some areas given the damage. Be safe OP! |
|
|
|
|
Quoted: I have no idea how the Gen pop actually survives one day after a storm without power. View Quote you could have just stopped there but yes |
|
I had a job during a storm where primary and secondary were down, but still hot on a dead end street. Primary was 4' off the ground and secondary on the ground. The town tree guys put caution tape on it and told customers to walk over/duck and they'd be fine. The customers were walking their kids under it and ducking the wires to get to the bus stop for four straight days before I showed up.
The crazy thing is the customers got mad at me because I killed the power. They said they had been fine until I showed up. |
|
|
Pretty well known when I was growing up. Even better known now that I'm older. We had lines down last winter and someone said "I'll just go fix it!" dead serious. Everyone in the room just turned and looked at him like . He was not local.
|
|
GD the last few days has reinforced that there is a significant number of people who take the "DON'T TELL ME WHAT TO DO" to an extreme even when it comes to the personal safety of themselves and especially others.
|
|
Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. View Quote A downed primary line doesn’t even have to be connected to the the system to kill you. So yea, that’s some bad info |
|
Quoted: A downed primary line doesn’t even have to be connected to the the system to kill you. So yea, that’s some bad info View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. A downed primary line doesn’t even have to be connected to the the system to kill you. So yea, that’s some bad info People don't get that a gennie hooked up to a house and backfed gets it's voltage stepped up as it goes thru the transformer into the primary or secondary wires. It's ain't 120/240 when it pops you, its 7200 or 14.4 or whatever the line specs are. |
|
Grounded/ Denergized Line/ never Harmed anyone, just like a unloaded gun!
|
|
Quoted: Please stay the f out of the coned, taped off and unsafe area you stupid mo fo and that includes your dogs, vehicles, golf carts and so on too. Don't walk by it, over it, or under it, especially when the stupid old fvck of the neighborhood grabbed it earlier and pronounced it "safe." It's primary and they are doing sub work and the line fuses are NOT open. I have no idea how the Gen pop actually survives one day after a storm without power. PS, we really got a slammed locally, straight line winds were brutal in places. And no, unfortunately, few of us know when you personally will get your power back on. I wish I knew and I'd tell you if I knew, but I don't. View Quote Isn't this literally how half of the people died in Maui? Linemen putting out orange cones and telling everyone to drive back towards the fire? |
|
Quoted: To be fair, yellow tape usually means caution. Red tape usually means stay out. Fuck messing with downed wires though. Anyone not professionally involved in the repairs doing that is an idiot. View Quote I had to tell the professionals that the downed lines in my yard were live. “No this line is shut down so we can hook up the downed junction down the hill”. Me: no it’s live go check a couple meters on the street and see if they’re spinning. Three minutes later and baffled “you’re right they’re spinning” this must come from the transformer across the intersection.” |
|
know your tape. yellow means proceed with caution. RED is DO NOT CROSS.
|
|
Had the sirens go off. Like "what the fuck are those" then got the tornado warning on the phone!
|
|
|
Welcome to my world. Crossing gates coming down, flashing etc, mean pedal to the metal, drive around, hit the gates, etc. Can't cure stupid
|
|
After one of the hurricanes a few years back , we had a guy who got fed up with all the power trucks driving by and no one would stop and perform the simple task of throwing the jack back in his transformer so he could have power.
So he got his ladder out and did it himself with a pair of channel locks. Didn’t go well for him…. ETA: When we rolled up on downed lines, I learned to scan them with the thermal imaging camera, usually you could see where thot ones were going to ground by the heat signature, nice white lines on our camera, going through the tree, down the chain link fence, etc. We didn’t touch them either way, but it was useful for showing the citizens, and new firefighters. |
|
Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. View Quote Those poco guys that told you that are fucking retarded. Do not listen to that shit. |
|
One of my cow orkers, who was nominally a paid Safety Professional got DRT'd fucking around with a ~1kV line that that went down in his back yard. That shit gives me the willies.
|
|
I used to work for a company doing power line inspection and repair via helicopter. We were told that the magic number was 7. Power line - 7 feet - helicopter - 7 feet - tree equals You’re Dead.
|
|
Quoted: Those poco guys that told you that are fucking retarded. Do not listen to that shit. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. Those poco guys that told you that are fucking retarded. Do not listen to that shit. I had cones in my truck and cordoned off the area and we wouldn't let anyone cross or enter that piece of the street. Some guy come by after a few hours in a poco shirt and chuckled at us for being afraid of the down line and cracked some joke about how there wasn't going to power around there for a while and acted like we were over reacting. I was tired and only half listening, but he made it sound like the system would sense the faults and open up. |
|
Quoted: I had a job during a storm where primary and secondary were down, but still hot on a dead end street. Primary was 4' off the ground and secondary on the ground. The town tree guys put caution tape on it and told customers to walk over/duck and they'd be fine. The customers were walking their kids under it and ducking the wires to get to the bus stop for four straight days before I showed up. The crazy thing is the customers got mad at me because I killed the power. They said they had been fine until I showed up. View Quote |
|
|
Was out on a Mi Highway, had it closed both ways due to primary across the road. County road commission had the road completely closed both ways with the wide road closed signs, [3 so you had to work to get around them] was at an intersection so people could turn right or left and get past the closure. Nope, florida Q tip in a motor home towing a VW thing [that was nice] made it around it and drove all the way to the downed line and then wanted to argue he needed to get by it. NOPE. Told him to back up and he said he couldn't [he was flat towing the thing] so I just told him he could sit until it was open. He was upset because there was a cop further up and the cop didn't flag him down and personally tell him the road was closed. You know, because the sign COULDN'T pertain to him, right? He made it around the signage but said he couldn't make the turn at the intersection even though the signs were a few feet PAST the intersection..........
|
|
@fxntime
People ignoring the caution and danger signs suck. In construction, yellow means "CAUTION'" and red means "DANGER", but reading different service providers' websites, colors can mean anything - i.e. yellow tape = our utility's problem, orange tape = some other utility's problem. I'm an inside wireman, not a lineman. But in the last couple years, I've been doing more with medium voltage, and two years ago started switching in my first substation - 200kV, down to 13.8kV (whatever Google required, I forget ). My questions for you are: Does MI have some kind of real-time automation controllers utilizing synchrophasors and phasor measurement units to automatically open lines immediately after a line breaks? If a line just changed elevation without breaking, would an "RTAC" activate? Even if lines are opened automatically, you all still need to physically LOTO at all upstream sources? Does MI allow you to ass-whoop retards who backfeed your lines? ETA - Is 35 feet still the minimum distance from downed power lines? |
|
Quoted: Are you telling me after a few minutes the contactors are going to keep trying on ground faulted lines? We had a tornado recently, and the poco guys told us that we'd be more likely to find a hearty meal in North Korea than a live line on the ground after a few minutes. View Quote I've seen them lay minutes to hours between violent eruptions of sparks. |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.