View Single Post
  #59   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Doug Miller Doug Miller is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,375
Default Is There An Electrician in the House?

In article , CJT wrote:
Doug Miller wrote:

In article ,

Jim Redelfs wrote:

In article ,
Puddin' Man wrote:


I switch off the main breaker and use a gas powered 40A generator
to backfeed the 30A (220v) circuit for the elec. dryer.

What can I expect? Live circuits, dead circuits? Overload
conditions??

Dead linemen?

Yeah, yeah... You switched off the main breaker, but, in your urgency and in


the dark, flipped the WRONG breaker.



Oh, puhleeeze... don't be ridiculous.

If he has enough light (from a flashlight, candle, oil lamp, moonlight,
sunlight, cig lighter, Coleman lantern, jar full of fireflies, or whatever)

to
connect the generator, how do you imagine that he can't see which breaker is
the main?

For that matter, even in the dark, how does he not *feel* which breaker is

the
main?

And of course it should be obvious that, once the generator is on, there
*will* be lights available to check to make *sure* that the main is off.

Properly install and use a transfer switch or just run some extension cords

to
essential appliances during the outage.



Or be aware of the difference between real and imagined hazards, take steps

to
prevent the real ones (such as making sure the main breaker is off), and
ignore the imagined ones. Yes, a transfer switch is the right way to do it.
No, you can't just run an extension cord to a furnace or a well pump. In an
emergency, you do what you have to do.

Since this is apparently an anticipated event (or we wouldn't be
discussing it), there's no excuse for allowing it to escalate into an
emergency.

Sure, and in a perfect world ever home would have a transfer switch already
installed.

Is there one in your house?

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.