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A day without power, again!

Over the last two weeks, we have had two significant (more than 2 hours) power outages. One of the issues that many companies, including the power company, face in the summer is overload. In the summer, the drain on the power grid is huge. Add to that, the risk in the summer as lightning strikes and transformers don’t well do. The disruption for above ground cabling systems is huge. The cost of pushing those cables under the ground is huge. The single near miss by a lightning strike can take one, two or more transformers. Then you have a power outage. Now in the spring or fall, that isn’t bad, you can open the windows, and the house won’t be uncomfortable.

In the summer and the dead of winter, it doesn’t take long for a house to become uncomfortable. Stuffy is the phrase you often hear. You can’t let the outside air in, and you don’t have power for fans. Solar power offsets some of that risk. But during a bad thunderstorm (when lightning strikes occur) Solars systems are not operating at their peak efficiency. That is when a backup system is useful. There are a number, some of the battery systems for Solar and Wind turbines. That allows you to store two days or so of power. The other option is a natural gas operated Home Generator. Each of the two power backup systems allows you to create a Micro-Grid.

A Micro-Grid is a system, just like the power company has, but you are only supplying power to your house. It isolates you from the grid outage caused by the lightning strike. It takes between 4-8 hours to cool a 2000 square foot house. That means if the power is out for more than 2 hours. Your house will have a temperature increase that will take your air conditioning system or heating system 2-4 hours of running to return to your comfort level temperature. The reality of power today is we forget, it has to be generated, transmitted and consumed. All three of those require different systems. Each of the systems can fail. Being without power isn’t a lot of fun.

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Written by DocAndersen

One fan, One team and a long time dream Go Cubs!!!!!!!!!!!!!

65 Comments

  1. Power outage is a normal thing where I live, unfortunately ?. The house has a backup genset but as there are appliances and bakery equipment that need to run, that means no A/C during outage. Worse when it happens at night because the heat absorbed by the concrete can turn the bedroom into a mini oven. Not a lot of fun. Staying outside in the open means mosquito bites. Either way is no fun.

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  2. Despite the heat in the Lake Charles region, there have not been any blackouts. Blackouts occur when there a lot of heavy storms in the region.

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  3. Actually our power did go out for an hour a man left his hand brake off on our street and the car knocked the power line half way down but the electricity co fixed it up quickly…….

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  4. In our country, the power failure happens very rarely … most often in winter, if a lot of snow falls or there is a frost that scratches electrical wires … it is very unpleasant

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  5. It must be unpleasant if that happens. I experienced a power outages three weeks ago, fortunately it didn’t last long, only about half an hour. Either day or night, blackouts in the summer are indeed very disturbing.

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  6. In this part of the world I am in, Kenya, power outages don’t happen frequently. It’s rare to experience electricity blackout. However, here in Tanzania in a region I’m residing the power outages are a common phenomenon. In such case we are left to use either candles or mobile phones as a source of light. The backups are not friendly to our pockets.

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    • I remember, living in an old house in Ohio, we ended up having blackouts every week. It was bad for a while. We got used to relaxing and reading by flashlight.

    • we had them often when we first moved to our house. We bought a generator, and haven’t noticed them since, other than the last couple of days, because all the neighbors are at our house~

  7. I am uncomfortable not having some kind of backup. I really need to have some way to make coffee at least. There is no natural gas where I live so I think there is a generator in my future.

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      • I was recently looking into Aquion Energy’s saltwater batteries but found they were in chapter 11 protection. (strange) I have heard that someone purchased them. Sometimes this means we won’t see this technology for a long time. They don’t have the fire danger and are eco-friendly. There are some operational advantages as well but size is not in their favor. http://aquionenergy.com

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          • I am wondering myself. I think a similar company in Europe is doing well. It has been a while since I looked also. I didn’t get any clues to what was happening with them. Not many reviews. I have installed in my basement a motion activated floodlight made for outside and I put the little solar panel in a window. I haven’t hit a light switch down there ever since. I have to wave my arms around once in a while.

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  8. While I was in Bulgaria there were thunderstorms. That stopped for about half an hour. In Spain I’m 14 years old I do not remember having such problems. Not for such a long period.

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  9. It happens in India on regular basis but not in Australia. We faced an outage for 15 minutes once in 2016 but were notified in advance.

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