Nobody is every without electrons. ;POriginally posted by: FoBoT
cnn says over 4 millions without electrons
I thought Florida lost their right to vote after 2000.Originally posted by: Rubycon
Good thing this did not happen on election day. Imagine Florida losing all its electrical votes! :laugh:
no worries, everything is taken care ofOriginally posted by: Rubycon
Good thing this did not happen on election day. Imagine Florida losing all its electrical votes! :laugh:
nuclear plants don't shut down unless they have to, they are base load and unless something is really messed up you don't shutdown (on purpose or if you have to refuel). we lose $1 million~ a day/unit when we are shutdown.Originally posted by: BrownTown
That seems pretty unlikely unless the utility down there is idiotic, utilities are required to ave spinning reserve equal to their largest unit. Nuclear plants and coal plants shut down every down on a daily basis and don't cause blackouts unless someone REALLY REALLY screwed up. Especially not with this weather, maybe on a 105 degree day in the summer, but the load right now shouldn't be stressing anyone.Originally posted by: Xavier434
btw, the reason for the outage was determined to be a Nuclear Power plant in South Miami being shut down for safety reasons. We do not know what those reasons are.
Well thank god tampa didn't get hit too hard with it, were all here taking the bar exam right nowOriginally posted by: Rubycon
Good thing this did not happen on election day. Imagine Florida losing all its electrical votes! :laugh:
so your refrigerator didn't lose power and the pickles are safeOriginally posted by: MrLee
I'll be OK.
That's what you tell yourself to block out the horrible images. It'll be dark soon, and they mostly come at night... mostly.Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Nah, everyone knows that old people don't fuck.
yeah, but when you add 103 nuclear units and 1000 large coal units there is always a couple that will be crapping out that day. My point is simply that some big utility somewhere in the country is having a 1000MW unit trip offline every day, this summer working for TVA it happened at least 5 times between the nuclear units and largest coal units, I think Brown's Ferry 1 SCRAMed 3 times last summer (maybe 2). Although having said that, obviously it WASN'T the nuclear plant that was the problem, it was the problem that shut the nuclear plant down, so its not FPL screwing up their reserve margins, its just a bad storm knocking down some powerlines or someting and one of them was close enough to the nuclear plant to trip the unit off. Thats another thing that happens pretty often, 2 summers ago working for TVA all 10 units at Johnsonville Coal plant were tripped offline from a ground fault on a transformer, just part of "shit happens", but usually losing millions of customers is not the result unless the shit really hit the fan.Originally posted by: JohnCU
nuclear plants don't shut down unless they have to, they are base load and unless something is really messed up you don't shutdown (on purpose or if you have to refuel). we lose $1 million~ a day/unit when we are shutdown.Originally posted by: BrownTown
That seems pretty unlikely unless the utility down there is idiotic, utilities are required to ave spinning reserve equal to their largest unit. Nuclear plants and coal plants shut down every down on a daily basis and don't cause blackouts unless someone REALLY REALLY screwed up. Especially not with this weather, maybe on a 105 degree day in the summer, but the load right now shouldn't be stressing anyone.Originally posted by: Xavier434
btw, the reason for the outage was determined to be a Nuclear Power plant in South Miami being shut down for safety reasons. We do not know what those reasons are.
true, but shutting down a coal plant and starting back up is nothing. nuclear is totally different, which you probably know but just stating for the othersOriginally posted by: BrownTown
yeah, but when you add 103 nuclear units and 1000 large coal units there is always a couple that will be crapping out that day. My point is simply that some big utility somewhere in the country is having a 1000MW unit trip offline every day, this summer working for TVA it happened at least 5 times between the nuclear units and largest coal units, I think Brown's Ferry 1 SCRAMed 3 times last summer (maybe 2). Although having said that, obviously it WASN'T the nuclear plant that was the problem, it was the problem that shut the nuclear plant down, so its not FPL screwing up their reserve margins, its just a bad storm knocking down some powerlines or someting and one of them was close enough to the nuclear plant to trip the unit off. Thats another thing that happens pretty often, 2 summers ago working for TVA all 10 units at Johnsonville Coal plant were tripped offline from a ground fault on a transformer, just part of "shit happens", but usually losing millions of customers is not the result unless the shit really hit the fan.Originally posted by: JohnCU
nuclear plants don't shut down unless they have to, they are base load and unless something is really messed up you don't shutdown (on purpose or if you have to refuel). we lose $1 million~ a day/unit when we are shutdown.Originally posted by: BrownTown
That seems pretty unlikely unless the utility down there is idiotic, utilities are required to ave spinning reserve equal to their largest unit. Nuclear plants and coal plants shut down every down on a daily basis and don't cause blackouts unless someone REALLY REALLY screwed up. Especially not with this weather, maybe on a 105 degree day in the summer, but the load right now shouldn't be stressing anyone.Originally posted by: Xavier434
btw, the reason for the outage was determined to be a Nuclear Power plant in South Miami being shut down for safety reasons. We do not know what those reasons are.
I saw a lot of that in Memphis from a wind storm we had one night. In fact, I saw that pic on the host site and thought it was from a house I drove by on my way to work that next morning.Originally posted by: allisolm
This is what the storms did in Tallahasse late this morning. next door to me
I live immediately to the right of this pic. The dirt/root chunk is 6 ft tall. Had 2 firetrucks, utility co. and tv news. My power and internet is fine. Hers next door, not so much. You can see her power line at the right of the pic going down under the tree.
yeah, i was just stating that suddenly turning off a 1GW unit is bad no matter what type of unit it is, but at the same time there should be >1GW in spinning reserve to meet the demand. Like from working at TVA if one of their nuclear units craps out at a low demand time they will temporarilly turn Racoon Mountain (pumped storage plant) up to 1600MW and then ramp up the expensive coal units (like Kingston and Johnsonville) to meet the demand. At a higher demand time they would turn on ~20 combustion turbines to meet the demand.Originally posted by: JohnCU
true, but shutting down a coal plant and starting back up is nothing. nuclear is totally different, which you probably know but just stating for the others![]()
My roommate told me it was surreal, everyone just huddled around the libraryOriginally posted by: mariok2006
Yeah I was in class when it happened. All of USF was without power for a while.
The outage on Fletcher Ave. and on the entire USF Tampa campus was (apparently) caused by a car accident on Fletcher. Heard it from friends.Originally posted by: aphex
Well thank god tampa didn't get hit too hard with it, were all here taking the bar exam right nowOriginally posted by: Rubycon
Good thing this did not happen on election day. Imagine Florida losing all its electrical votes! :laugh:
I can imagine it now, middle of a convention center with 4,000 other people taking the worst exam of our lives and the lights go out![]()
The electrons "flow" in alternating current? I thought they just wiggled back and forth.Originally posted by: lozina
Although one of my friends just called me from there says his power is back on now. was out for about 45 minutes
anyone in the Northeast remember that big blackout a couple years ago? Man that was a mess... you really take those electrons for granted until they stop flowing
slowlyOriginally posted by: DrPizza
The electrons "flow" in alternating current? I thought they just wiggled back and forth.Originally posted by: lozina
Although one of my friends just called me from there says his power is back on now. was out for about 45 minutes
anyone in the Northeast remember that big blackout a couple years ago? Man that was a mess... you really take those electrons for granted until they stop flowing![]()