View Single Post
  #101   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Rod Speed Rod Speed is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 40,893
Default OT. Ford Lightning. Battery F150



"Dean Hoffman" wrote in message
...
On Saturday, May 22, 2021 at 12:45:56 PM UTC-5, Rod Speed wrote:
"Dean Hoffman" wrote in message
...
On Saturday, May 22, 2021 at 11:45:59 AM UTC-5, Joey wrote:
"Larry" wrote in message
...
On 5/22/21 1:11 AM, Joey wrote:
Makes a lot more sense to build nukes and heat houses that way.


True but you better have backup heat because a tree branch loaded
with
ice
can take out electric power for a week
Not with underground power it can't.


Yeahbut, overhead transmission lines can carry
a lot more power than underground can.

Thats bull**** with new housing subdivisions.

I've been watching how ours are done, underground
everything. With power cables a ****ing sight thicker
than the ones used on the overhead lines because
its all in the one very thick cable with the undergrounds.


It's the same in newer parts of towns in my area in the U.S.
The power lines carrying power town to town are overhead. The
big transmission lines are overhead also.
The local utilities must've solved the issue
with using twisted pair wiring overhead.


Twisted pair isnt used for power lines, thats for phone
lines and we dont do phone lines anymore either, its
all fiber optic underground here now. And all have
natural gas and water and sewer lines and storm
water underground too.


Phone lines were buried here in the mid 70s


Here too then.

when a good spring ice/snowstorm hit.


Didnt happen for that reason here, just looking better
and not being vulnerable to lightning strikes.

Natural gas lines sometimes lay in the fence lines in rural areas along
roads


Never get it done that stupidly here.

or are buried.


All ours are apart from ****ing great pipelines.

The thing about overhead twisted pair wires
for power came up a few years ago.


We have that between the power poles and the house barge board.
Not a pair tho, mine is 4 wires with only 3 used because I dont have
a 3 phase service, only a 2 phase service. Quite different to the north
american house services.

https://www.homeownershub.com/maintenance/twisted-pair-overhead-power-lines-why-870221-.htm
Philo and dpb answered my question back then.


Even in the summer, thunderstorms, half-dead trees and power lines
don't mix either.


I dont heat my house in summer.


People in my area are fond of air conditioning.


But that is hardly ever interrupted by an iced up branch for some reason.


The local utilities shut down irrigation during
the day so people can stay cool in their offices.

So there is no problem with no aircon for a week.
And even if there is, we have these funky things
called generators that work fine after a tornado etc.
Every power outage I've suffered through was caused by some jackass
leftist environmental-wacko tree-huger who just had to plant trees
along
the power line right-of-way.


Our power utility cuts those down. You lot are too stupid
to do that ? You get to wear the downsides of that.


The worst power outage in my area in memory was due to a spring
ice/snowstorm.
(Central Nebraska)

And that happens so rarely that it makes no sense to keep
****ing all that natural gas against the wall heating the house
all winter and part of the spring and fall.


The natural gas lines are already installed. It
would be a big mess changing to electric power.


Nope, the power lines are already installed too.

Also irrigation wells and grain drying use natural gas here.


Stupid to be ****ing what gas we have against the wall that way.

Running miles of power lines would be expensive.


So are stupid EVs.

I've never thought about changing a household
propane or natural gas furnace to electric heat.


It isnt financially useful currently, but if you are
worried about the gas running out as Ed is, it
makes a lot more sense than stupid EVs