Message boards : Number crunching : Dangers of crunching
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We had a power failure late at night on last Thursday. This happened before, but not the way like this time. | |
ID: 38586 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Hi Zoltan, | |
ID: 38595 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
We have the same thing here in the US, aluminum and copper wires mixed in the same building. The need for maintenance is never passed on from owner to owner and eventually someone gets burned, I HOPE your guy went thru what he could to ensure a reduced possibility of any future occurrences. Here in the US some people even went so far as to have all the aluminum wires removed, but that can be a VERY expensive process, especially for you with 4 stories!! In the US though the process of mixing, in new construction, is now banned by the Electrical Code, some places follow the Code and some don't. But MOST Electricians are aware of the problem and are hopefully informing the owners. | |
ID: 38601 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
There might have been a power surge that contributed to the failure. They can be due to lightning strikes, or even switching of equipment with high inductive loads (e.g., motors). I had a whole-house surge suppressor installed recently, though whether it does any good won't be known for a long time. Also, I use series surge suppressors (Zero Surge) for each PC. | |
ID: 38617 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Hi Zoltan, Thanks TJ! I was afraid that, but luckily nothing damaged, except my RAC as some workunits failed and one was stucked and running for 44 hours before I've noticed. | |
ID: 38621 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Hi Zoltan, I am happy for you Zoltan, no damage. ____________ Greetings from TJ | |
ID: 38625 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Great to hear you had no damage to your computer equipment. | |
ID: 38630 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
There might have been a power surge that contributed to the failure. They can be due to lightning strikes, or even switching of equipment with high inductive loads (e.g., motors). I had a whole-house surge suppressor installed recently, though whether it does any good won't be known for a long time. Also, I use series surge suppressors (Zero Surge) for each PC. I too had a whole house one put in and he told me there is no longer any need for one for every pc? Are you being extra careful or did your guy say something different? Mine was about 150 US Dollars for the part, I live in a 4 bedroom 3 story, including the basement, home. My guy did at the same time he put in 3 20 amp circuits for my pc's. No more blowing of the circuit breakers is a GOOD thing! | |
ID: 38631 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
I too had a whole house one put in and he told me there is no longer any need for one for every pc? Are you being extra careful or did your guy say something different? Mine was about 150 US Dollars for the part, I live in a 4 bedroom 3 story, including the basement, home. My guy did at the same time he put in 3 20 amp circuits for my pc's. No more blowing of the circuit breakers is a GOOD thing! I actually had the Zero Surge protectors in place first, and added the whole-house one later when I replaced the circuit breakers. It may be over-kill, but you don't get a second chance with surges. And the whole-house one will protect the lights. It is said that the premature failures that you sometimes get with the compact fluorescent light bulbs are due to power spikes, so maybe that will do some good. I also have uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) on each PC (plugged into each Zero Surge), which provide some surge protection, though that is not their main function. They are there because I use a ramdisk on some of the PCs for storing the BOINC data folder. That causes all the writes to go to main memory, protecting the SSD from the high write rate of CEP2, but I then have to controllably shut down each PC with the UPS in case of a power failure, so that the contents of the ramdisk can be written into the SSD before it is lost. Otherwise, I would not really need the UPS. | |
ID: 38635 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Great to hear you had no damage to your computer equipment. We was wondering about it too. There could be two reasons for that: 1. The fuse was short circuited for some reason (bigger then 50A load for a short time) 2. Dodge the electronic meter by bypassing it. | |
ID: 38636 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Aluminum wiring is bad news and worse news if it's mixed with copper. On top of the safety hazards (50-60 times more likely to start a fire than with full copper wiring) many insurance companies now refuse to insure houses with aluminum wiring. There are ways to make aluminum safer by using proper connectors but the best thing to do is to avoid it if possible. | |
ID: 38638 | Rating: 0 | rate: / Reply Quote | |
Message boards : Number crunching : Dangers of crunching