zanejohnson
Diamond Member
damn sounds like you get to bill a ton of man hours 🙂
good thing those tapes worked 🙂
good thing those tapes worked 🙂
This sort of happened at my work. UPS tech put system in bypass for maintenance and forgot to put it back. Power went out, generator kicked in and fried some switches and a server. Cisco made some money that Sunday.
Did you guys implement MOPs for all work after this event?
No, and ups tech said he didn't leave it off even though he had it off when he was working on it two days earlier on friday afternoon.
We had this happen here during a hurricane.
Does anyone know how much days of run time of fuel a hospital usually keeps on hand for their generators? I have also thought that this could be a weakness in a major event, since fuel could be hard to come by.
the worst night I ever had on the job was when I got the 11 pm call that the generator failed at our data center and we had 3000 servers offline.
turned out that right as grid power failed, lightning struck the generator.
We had this happen here during a hurricane.
I'm surprised that for something as critical as a hospital, the generator is not exercised as frequently.
I'm surprised that for something as critical as a hospital, the generator is not exercised as frequently.
It used to be load tested every 2 months. However, because the transfer to generator power takes 30 seconds, testing prooved to be quite disruptive.
Because the generator transfer switch was at the main panel, the only way to switch the generator in was to turn off the main building switch. Anything that wasn't on a UPS (which was basically everything except OR/ICU/some servers) had to be shut down in advance. MRI scanners had to be shut down for the test to avoid data loss. Elevators had to be brought down to ground floor and locked out. Clinics wouldn't have access to IT services, as office PCs/networks were not a "generator priority".
Effectively it meant the hospital had to shut to everything non-emergency. But, management couldn't tolerate the half-day per 2 month productivity loss.
no shit. i work for a small company and we test our generators weekly. you would think that a hospital would have their shit together.
Another update: Rewiring work has now well underway, and the new substation building is being built, and contracts with the power company have been signed, and the power co has ordered the new service transformers.
However, the redesign work has added a significant delay.
As the temperature hit 90 degrees today, and load on the sole service transformer hit 110% of maximum, management had all the AC turned off at the panels, and banned the use of non-essential electrical equipment such as ventilation fans, etc. In order to prevent the transformer from melting down.
It's going to be a long, hot Summer.
Another update: Rewiring work has now well underway, and the new substation building is being built, and contracts with the power company have been signed, and the power co has ordered the new service transformers.
However, the redesign work has added a significant delay.
As the temperature hit 90 degrees today, and load on the sole service transformer hit 110% of maximum, management had all the AC turned off at the panels, and banned the use of non-essential electrical equipment such as ventilation fans, etc. In order to prevent the transformer from melting down.
It's going to be a long, hot Summer.