O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. -- What does a Polish woman do after she sucks a cock? Spits out the feathers. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. -- An Englishman was feeling a little queezy on his first sailing, and leaned over the edge of the boat. He saw a Frenchman below opening his porthole so, feeling the urge to bring up his dinner, he yelled "LOOK OUT!" The Frenchman stuck his head out of the porthole and was decorated with semi-digested food. "YOU SILLY ENGLISHMAN!!!!" he yelled, "Why do you say look out when you mean look in?" |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? I find it amusing that the person in here with almost as much OCD as Simon accuses someone else of being ill. -- An Englishman was feeling a little queezy on his first sailing, and leaned over the edge of the boat. He saw a Frenchman below opening his porthole so, feeling the urge to bring up his dinner, he yelled "LOOK OUT!" The Frenchman stuck his head out of the porthole and was decorated with semi-digested food. "YOU SILLY ENGLISHMAN!!!!" he yelled, "Why do you say look out when you mean look in?" |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. Where? |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? I find it amusing that the person in here with almost as much OCD as Simon accuses someone else of being ill. I'm not having a go at you. But we both know the truth. http://www.autism.org.uk/about/what-...Fc-6Gwodpi4KuQ Social interaction People with Asperger syndrome often have difficulty 'reading' other people - recognising or understanding others' feelings and intentions - and expressing their own emotions. This can make it very hard for them to navigate the social world. They may: a.. appear to be insensitive b.. seek out time alone when overloaded by other people c.. not seek comfort from other people d.. appear to behave 'strangely' or in a way thought to be socially inappropriate. They may find it hard to form friendships. Some may want to interact with other people and make friends, but may be unsure how to go about it. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 9 Jan 2017 17:32:25 -0000, Brian Gaff wrote:
Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. 'leccy'? Also perhaps: http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html...ary-limit.html |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:26:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. Where? You said "The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun"" -- I know you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:32:15 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? I find it amusing that the person in here with almost as much OCD as Simon accuses someone else of being ill. I'm not having a go at you. But we both know the truth. http://www.autism.org.uk/about/what-...Fc-6Gwodpi4KuQ Social interaction People with Asperger syndrome often have difficulty 'reading' other people - recognising or understanding others' feelings and intentions - and expressing their own emotions. This can make it very hard for them to navigate the social world. They may: a.. appear to be insensitive b.. seek out time alone when overloaded by other people c.. not seek comfort from other people d.. appear to behave 'strangely' or in a way thought to be socially inappropriate. They may find it hard to form friendships. Some may want to interact with other people and make friends, but may be unsure how to go about it. Sounds nothing like me. I'm a perfectly nice guy unless someone does something stupid, then I make fun of them. -- I know you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:26:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. Where? You said "The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun"" Yes, that is what the dickhead said. Is there anything else I can assist you with Mr Hucker? |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:59:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:26:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. Where? You said "The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun"" Yes, that is what the dickhead said. Is there anything else I can assist you with Mr Hucker? Sounded rather like you disagreed with him. -- Complete with obligatory low frequency bass, electrically recorded on a four track in two hours. This has enough power to destroy the most expensive washing machine. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
James Wilkinson Sword wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:59:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:26:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. Where? You said "The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun"" Yes, that is what the dickhead said. Is there anything else I can assist you with Mr Hucker? Sounded rather like you disagreed with him. You have a mind like a steel trap. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:48:44 +0000, mechanic wrote:
On Mon, 9 Jan 2017 17:32:25 -0000, Brian Gaff wrote: Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. 'leccy'? Also perhaps: http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html...ary-limit.html Strangely, we just had a power cut. The screen gave me enough light to continue using Facebook and the web, and it only lasted a few minutes. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 20:30:13 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote:
James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:59:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:26:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:53:54 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 18:10:00 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: James Wilkinson Sword wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 17:46:42 -0000, Mr Pounder Esquire wrote: Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Brian Goes back to 2014 Brian. The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun" and misses those days. This bellend had not seen her father arrive home from a 12 hour shift, walk into a cold dark house and not eat a hot meal. Land fit for heroes my backside. Not soft enough for you then? What? Sounds like your body would not cope. I was there and I did cope. You could not have handled it. Are you really that stupid to have missed the point of my comment? Perhaps I did not take into account your Asperger's Syndrome when I made the comment? Would you like me to explain it to you word by word? You said it wasn't fun. Where? You said "The dickhead who posted it thought it was "fun"" Yes, that is what the dickhead said. Is there anything else I can assist you with Mr Hucker? Sounded rather like you disagreed with him. You have a mind like a steel trap. Sorry for getting the better of you. -- The tired doctor was awakened by a phone call in the middle of the night. "Please, you have to come right over," pleaded the distraught young mother. "My child has swallowed a contraceptive." The physician dressed quickly, but before he could get out the door, the phone rang again. "You don't have to come over after all," the woman said with a sigh of relief. "My husband just found another one." |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On 09/01/17 23:10, Bob Eager wrote:
On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:48:44 +0000, mechanic wrote: On Mon, 9 Jan 2017 17:32:25 -0000, Brian Gaff wrote: Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. 'leccy'? Also perhaps: http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html...ary-limit.html Strangely, we just had a power cut. The screen gave me enough light to continue using Facebook and the web, and it only lasted a few minutes. Intriguing. So What was powering the broadband router then? |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Tue, 10 Jan 2017 05:03:44 +0200, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 09/01/17 23:10, Bob Eager wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:48:44 +0000, mechanic wrote: On Mon, 9 Jan 2017 17:32:25 -0000, Brian Gaff wrote: Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. 'leccy'? Also perhaps: http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html...ary-limit.html Strangely, we just had a power cut. The screen gave me enough light to continue using Facebook and the web, and it only lasted a few minutes. Intriguing. So What was powering the broadband router then? One of the three UPS units. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
In article ,
Bob Eager wrote: On Tue, 10 Jan 2017 05:03:44 +0200, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 09/01/17 23:10, Bob Eager wrote: On Mon, 09 Jan 2017 19:48:44 +0000, mechanic wrote: On Mon, 9 Jan 2017 17:32:25 -0000, Brian Gaff wrote: Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. 'leccy'? Also perhaps: http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html...ary-limit.html Strangely, we just had a power cut. The screen gave me enough light to continue using Facebook and the web, and it only lasted a few minutes. Intriguing. So What was powering the broadband router then? One of the three UPS units. my router also has a small UPS. A legacy from frequent overnight brownouts when the router needed to be re-booted in the morning. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
Brian Gaff wrote:
Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Agreed: anywhere that does not have a gas supply will rely on electricity for cooking and for heating (fairly basic human requirements), and everyone needs electricity for fridges/freezers if they can't buy fresh food from the shops every day, which has become unnecessary/impossible with the demise of most "corner shops" and the reliance on fewer but larger supermarkets. That's leaving aside our dependence on electricity for the internet. OK, so a power-cut of a couple of hours isn't going to damage food in the fridge or freezer. I can remember an earlier set of planned power cuts in the late 60s or very early 70s, presumably as an energy-saving measure because of Yet Another Strike. I was around 5 - 8 at the time, so I wasn't aware of the full background, though I think it was either coal miners or power-station workers that had gone on strike. All the parents of infant-school-age children where I lived organised a rota so groups of children would all have their "tea" (as in Yorkshire word for evening meal) at the house of whoever was due to have power that evening - with those people who cooked by gas getting called on a lot more! I remember that the zones for cutting off the power were fairly small: it was common for several streets to be turned off but nearby ones still to have power. Because my parents cooked by gas and our living room had a gas fire (in addition to gas-powered central heating) we got called on quite a lot to "do our bit" :-) We were lucky to live in a town, where there was a gas supply. Out in rural areas (eg where we live now) there is no gas so there's no way of cooking or heating when there's a power cut - unless you go to the expense of a backup bottled gas supply or paraffin heaters. Oil central heating is no use without power to the pump. That's where an open fire comes in useful - our present house has no gas but we've got the fire to keep us warm during power cuts and we can even toast bread on it! |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On 10/01/2017 10:10, NY wrote:
Out in rural areas (eg where we live now) there is no gas so there's no way of cooking or heating when there's a power cut - unless you go to the expense of a backup bottled gas supply or paraffin heaters. No mains gas here. The heating will still heat the core of the house and water without power (stove), and the (bottled) gas hob will still work (albeit with manual ignition). (13kg propane bottles last us between 4-6 months, possibly longer, on a conventional 4 burner hob). At some point I'll get the tuit to get the new battery for the UPS and plug the router into it. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
"NY" wrote in message ... Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Agreed: anywhere that does not have a gas supply will rely on electricity for cooking and for heating (fairly basic human requirements), Not if they have enough of a clue to have a camping gas stove for emergency cooking and some blankets etc. and everyone needs electricity for fridges/freezers if they can't buy fresh food from the shops every day, Depends on the season. which has become unnecessary/impossible with the demise of most "corner shops" and the reliance on fewer but larger supermarkets. Plenty use the larger supermarkets daily. That's leaving aside our dependence on electricity for the internet. OK, so a power-cut of a couple of hours isn't going to damage food in the fridge or freezer. I can remember an earlier set of planned power cuts in the late 60s or very early 70s, presumably as an energy-saving measure because of Yet Another Strike. I was around 5 - 8 at the time, so I wasn't aware of the full background, though I think it was either coal miners or power-station workers that had gone on strike. All the parents of infant-school-age children where I lived organised a rota so groups of children would all have their "tea" (as in Yorkshire word for evening meal) at the house of whoever was due to have power that evening - with those people who cooked by gas getting called on a lot more! I remember that the zones for cutting off the power were fairly small: it was common for several streets to be turned off but nearby ones still to have power. Because my parents cooked by gas and our living room had a gas fire (in addition to gas-powered central heating) we got called on quite a lot to "do our bit" :-) We were lucky to live in a town, where there was a gas supply. Out in rural areas (eg where we live now) there is no gas so there's no way of cooking or heating when there's a power cut - unless you go to the expense of a backup bottled gas supply Doesn’t cost much for what works fine for days/weeks. or paraffin heaters. Oil central heating is no use without power to the pump. We had a gravity feed. That's where an open fire comes in useful - our present house has no gas but we've got the fire to keep us warm during power cuts and we can even toast bread on it! |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Tue, 10 Jan 2017 10:10:33 -0000, NY wrote:
Brian Gaff wrote: Does this go back a while as a thread? Where I worked we had a generator, here I had several old car batteries and a battery light and tv. The parafin heaters were great but oh the condensation. Note that shops nowadays would not cope, neither would banks they rely on their leccy and internet connections too much. Agreed: anywhere that does not have a gas supply will rely on electricity for cooking and for heating (fairly basic human requirements) No, luxuries. Requirements are things you need to survive. Which are oxygen, food, and water. -- Suicidal twin kills sister by mistake! |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Tuesday, 24 June 2014 11:43:28 UTC+1, Mick IOW wrote:
Hi all, Can anyone remind me about the power cuts in the 1970s please? Did the power cuts begin in September 1972 ? Were they They3 hours on & 3 hours off ? Then the 3 day week began in January in 1974 ? I live on the Isle of Wight, but they were all over the UK I think? Mick. last question first, yes they were all over the U.K. 3 day week began when you stated. the power cuts began in February 1972, the reason i know for sure is my youngest son was born on the 1st February, i came home from the hospital to the first DAY of power cuts, midwives in our town came out in force checking on new mums and elderly for heating and cooking facilities. i was one of the lucky ones i cooked by gas and had coal fires. i remember electricity going off every teatime, so baby was bathed by candlelight, as was cooking, I still have the original candles I bought. Carol |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
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O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
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O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
In message , Broadback
writes I worked in the computer industry and we were exempt the cuts, so it had very little effect on me! I was 19 in Feb 1972, and cannot really remember how we coped at home, although we still had open fires, so presumably kept warm. Cooking was electric, so I suppose planning was required. What I do remember is working in a large office in the City, and the Heath Robinson efforts to provide light. People who drove in brought car batteries which were wired to 12v bulbs all over the place, using crocodile clips and Sellotape. Management applauded the ingenuity, but today, H&S would have apoplexy. No real need for further power - we were still using manual calculators, Monroes. -- Graeme |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
wrote:
last question first, yes they were all over the U.K. 3 day week began when you stated. the power cuts began in February 1972, the reason i know for sure is my youngest son was born on the 1st February, i came home from the hospital to the first DAY of power cuts, midwives in our town came out in force checking on new mums and elderly for heating and cooking facilities. i was one of the lucky ones i cooked by gas and had coal fires. i remember electricity going off every teatime, so baby was bathed by candlelight, as was cooking, I still have the original candles I bought. At the time of the 3-day week and power cuts, GEC (as it was then) had 6 completed diesel-electric locos at the Preston factory. They had been ordered by Pakistan, but for complicated reasons they hadn't taken delivery. As I recall, the locos were split between the sites at Trafford Park, Sheffield and Preston. The pair sent to Trafford Park were placed adjacent to the main electrical test area, and connected through one of the rotary converter sets to feed back into the site supply. Together with the existing diesel sets, they enabled work to continue without interruption. To reduce the heating load, our large office gained a few fairly fierce Calor gas heaters. As we had a particularly large window area, we improvised secondary double glazing by taping together 4 foot wide rolls of plastic sheeting (1), with a slightly blue tinge. It was surprising how quickly the eyes adapted to the unusual lighting. (1) Actually available on-site because it was used as the release film for producing mica-based insulation sheets. Chris -- Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK Plant amazing Acers. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
Another old post, is somebody writing a history? Makes me feel old.
Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! wrote in message ... On Tuesday, 24 June 2014 11:43:28 UTC+1, Mick IOW wrote: Hi all, Can anyone remind me about the power cuts in the 1970s please? Did the power cuts begin in September 1972 ? Were they They3 hours on & 3 hours off ? Then the 3 day week began in January in 1974 ? I live on the Isle of Wight, but they were all over the UK I think? Mick. last question first, yes they were all over the U.K. 3 day week began when you stated. the power cuts began in February 1972, the reason i know for sure is my youngest son was born on the 1st February, i came home from the hospital to the first DAY of power cuts, midwives in our town came out in force checking on new mums and elderly for heating and cooking facilities. i was one of the lucky ones i cooked by gas and had coal fires. i remember electricity going off every teatime, so baby was bathed by candlelight, as was cooking, I still have the original candles I bought. Carol |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Mon, 22 Jan 2018 10:54:04 +0000, Graeme wrote:
I was 19 in Feb 1972, ... 12 ... and cannot really remember how we coped at home, although we still had open fires, so presumably kept warm. I think Dad had installed the CH by then, so had gas fire and gas back boiler, cooking was gas. The boiler had a gas pilot light and would run without mains but only on the gravity to loop the HW cylinder, no power for the CH circulation. Not that mattered before the CH one would often get up on a winters morning and suck old pennies to melt spy holes in the frost on the inside of the windows. Candles provided light. The power cuts were on a rolling rota basis so you didn't get the power cut(s) at the same time everyday. I remember looking for the rota in the evening newspaper and checking how close to the rotaed time the power went, IIRC is was normally within 5 mins and normally late. I wonder if living through that period is why I find loss of power just a PITA and no reason to turn into a headless chicken. We are prepared though, camping gas lanterns for light, twin ring and small grill gas camping hob, 2 kVA genset to run fridges/freezers and CH... -- Cheers Dave. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Monday, 22 January 2018 11:43:08 UTC, Dave Liquorice wrote:
I wonder if living through that period is why I find loss of power just a PITA and no reason to turn into a headless chicken. Planned rolling blackouts are easier to cope with than unplanned ones where you don't know if the power will be back on in 20 minutes or still be off 6 hours later. Owain |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
In article ,
wrote: On Monday, 22 January 2018 11:43:08 UTC, Dave Liquorice wrote: I wonder if living through that period is why I find loss of power just a PITA and no reason to turn into a headless chicken. Planned rolling blackouts are easier to cope with than unplanned ones where you don't know if the power will be back on in 20 minutes or still be off 6 hours later. Owain 4 years ago, we had a power "cut" for 4 days. Thankfully, the supply co brought us a generator - at 1 in the morning, though. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
In article , Huge
wrote: On 2018-01-22, charles wrote: In article , wrote: On Monday, 22 January 2018 11:43:08 UTC, Dave Liquorice wrote: I wonder if living through that period is why I find loss of power just a PITA and no reason to turn into a headless chicken. Planned rolling blackouts are easier to cope with than unplanned ones where you don't know if the power will be back on in 20 minutes or still be off 6 hours later. Owain 4 years ago, we had a power "cut" for 4 days. +1 Thankfully, the supply co brought us a generator - at 1 in the morning, though. I'd have been glad of that. We were an island of darkness in a sea of light. Once they *finally* came out to us, it took them about 15 minutes to restore supply and the guy said something about making a nuisance of ourselves in future, which I now do. In our case, 5 houses fed by a 1920s (I think) cable. There were 4 generators involved. The road had to be dug up, cable replaced and the road repaired. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On 22/01/18 12:18, Huge wrote:
On 2018-01-22, Dave Liquorice wrote: On Mon, 22 Jan 2018 10:54:04 +0000, Graeme wrote: I was 19 in Feb 1972, ... 12 ... and cannot really remember how we coped at home, although we still had open fires, so presumably kept warm. I think Dad had installed the CH by then, so had gas fire and gas back boiler, cooking was gas. 18. The only thing I really remember was studying for my 'A' Levels by the light of a Tilley lamp. Can't remember how we cooked or kept warm. My dad wisely installed a gas fire in the front room. Had a tank of hot water and a paraffin lamp :) |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
Dave Liquorice wrote:
The power cuts were on a rolling rota basis so you didn't get the power cut(s) at the same time everyday. There were a lot of streetlights still with electromechanical timeclocks, so the chance of having power and the light switched on became quite random. Chris -- Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK Plant amazing Acers. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
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O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
in 1661607 20180122 085106 Broadback wrote:
On 21/01/2018 20:47, wrote: On Tuesday, 24 June 2014 11:43:28 UTC+1, Mick IOW wrote: Hi all, Can anyone remind me about the power cuts in the 1970s please? Did the power cuts begin in September 1972 ? Were they They3 hours on & 3 hours off ? Then the 3 day week began in January in 1974 ? I live on the Isle of Wight, but they were all over the UK I think? Mick. last question first, yes they were all over the U.K. 3 day week began when you stated. the power cuts began in February 1972, the reason i know for sure is my youngest son was born on t he 1st February, i came home from the hospital to the first DAY of power cuts, midwives in our town came out in force checking on new mums and elderly for heating and cooking facilities. i was one of the lucky ones i cooked by gas and had coal fires. i remember electricity going off every teatime, s o baby was bathed by candlelight, as was cooking, I still have the original candles I bought. Carol I worked in the computer industry and we were exempt the cuts, so it had very little effect on me! Really? I was working at IBM Havant (building mainframes) and we had power for 12 hours (0700-1900) on Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday. There were diesel generators but these were reserved for essential stuff. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
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O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
"bert" wrote in message
... the power cuts began in February 1972, the reason i know for sure is my youngest son was born on the 1st February, i came home from the hospital to the first DAY of power cuts, midwives in our town came out in force checking on new mums and elderly for heating and cooking facilities. i was one of the lucky ones i cooked by gas and had coal fires. i remember electricity going off every teatime, so baby was bathed by candlelight, as was cooking, I still have the original candles I bought. Carol I worked in the computer industry and we were exempt the cuts, so it had very little effect on me! So did I and we had restricted supplies. I can remember lots of phased power cuts in Leeds. I was at primary school at the time. Different streets had power cuts at different times, so children went to a friend's house or they came to yours for "tea", depending on a) whose turn it was for a power cut, and b) whether or not you had a gas cooker and therefore were unaffected by power cuts as regards having an evening meal. I'd have guessed that it was earlier than 1972, but it must have been in my final year in Leeds before we moved to Wakefield. We had a gas cooker and gas fires in the living and dining rooms (in addition to gas central heating which needed electricity) so we escaped fairly lightly - but we did a lot of "entertaining" of friends ;-) |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
The local haulage company installed a diesel generator to power the lights in the sorting shed. Workers were supposed to turn off the incoming service isolator before starting it and closing the connection switch. Someone forgot and the machine rapidly died trying to power the surrounding town.
They came to me so I installed a bfo MEM changeover switch so the the lights could be powered by either mains or expensively repaired generator without chance of repetition. |
O/T power cuts and 3 day week around the 1970s
On Tuesday, 24 June 2014 11:43:28 UTC+1, Mick IOW wrote:
Hi all, Can anyone remind me about the power cuts in the 1970s please? Did the power cuts begin in September 1972 ? Were they They3 hours on & 3 hours off ? Then the 3 day week began in January in 1974 ? I live on the Isle of Wight, but they were all over the UK I think? Mick. As an electrician I made some good money during the power cuts of the early 70's installing generators for a well known supermarket chain, great work!! the generators picked up all the refrigeration and tills plus 60% of the lighting etc, a lot of the work at night when the stores where closed, we did 8 stores in all, hard work but very good money, I was in my 20's then and it was like winning the lottery today. |
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