brian john
Senior Member
- Location
- Leesburg, VA
I would turn off the main remove meter and install safety glass/plastic in meter.
fulthrotl said:..my lights flashed on, and
then off... and then, a minute later, again, and a minute later, again.
Brian John said:I would turn off the main remove meter and install safety glass/plastic in meter.
Of course, turning off the main is a matter of faith as well.
Breakers are man-made devices, and do fail to operate as designed on occassion. So it's entirely within the realm of possibilities that even turning the main of fails to open the circuit.
which is
fed off a 110 volt 2000 watt generator? both buses are fed thru each leg
of the 220 volt plug, the genset hasn't enough power to hurt anything,
and the house is fed...
This is obviously from the land of make believe, because I've never seen a 110 or 220 volt plug before.
Actually Randy that would be the normal sequence for the POCO's automatic reclosers trying to clear a fault on the lines. They will normally try to restore the line three times then lock out, which isolates the section of the line with the fault.
DWP does multiple reclosers, but to the best of my knowledge, SCE only
does once... 10 seconds after the peddler opens, the recloser ka-whams
it in an effort to hipot the line, and burn off the fault... if it doesn't work,
then the line patrolman has to hoof it out there....
these flickers were pretty weak, and didn't have the resounding oomph
you get from an edison reclose, so i was thinking it was generator magic, but
i could be wrong....
we'll never know..... it probably was edison just flailing......
one thing that is unnerving is being in a dwp distribution station about
8 am on a weekday, when all the blow dryers click on, and the mechanical
regulators go nuts trying to keep up.... that's when they grenade, in the
mornings..... the clicking and clacking is about as reassuring as hearing a
rattlesnake rattle.....
standard practice is go to outside for 15 minutes, and check something in
the truck.....
Sorry, but I wouldn't bet my life on your theoretical assurance. If someone managed to energize even one side of the service, it could still prove deadly upstream.But as I read the original question, the generator could not energize the primary side of the transformer.
Sorry, but I wouldn't bet my life on your theoretical assurance. If someone managed to energize even one side of the service, it could still prove deadly upstream.
When any winding (or winding segment) is energized at its design voltage, every other winding (or winding segment) is also energized at its design voltage.
Remember the earthquake back in '88 (or was it '89?) I was living in Norwalk at the time, and I heard the chaos in the substation about three blocks away. I walked over there to find out the extent of the damage to our area (as my neighbors across the street had power right away and our side was still out.) Well, the first aftershock hit and the evil sounds from that substation from the follow-on faults had me running clear down the block, even the crew got out of there fast....
While living in Nor Cal, a racer's dad who worked for PG&E offered me an up-close tour of a substation. I couldn't work up the nerve to do it.
Absolutely! Is airfare included in that package?if ya ever decide you want to get that up close and personal look of a powerhouse or generating station, lemme know.... tours are available.....
Absolutely! Is airfare included in that package?
Absolutely! Is airfare included in that package?
But as I read the original question, the generator could not energize the primary side of the transformer.