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#71
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Cast_Iron said:
Chris, you're suggesting that the powers that be engage in some planning are you?? As "Sir Humphrey" might say, "That's a novel approach, Minister". LOL! -- ============================================= Chris Game chrisgame@!yahoo!dotcodotuk ============================================= |
#72
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John Turner said:
"Depresion" wrote Why isn't this plastered across all the US news channels the way there power cut was across all of ours? It was, or must have been. I got an email from a friend in Georgia who asked if the power cut in London had affected us in Hull. Bah! According to Yahoo! the U.S. quoted shares of National Grid took a tumble at the same time as the cut; the Americans were certainly awake! -- ============================================= Chris Game chrisgame@!yahoo!dotcodotuk ============================================= |
#73
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On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 18:55:09 +0000 (UTC), "Terry Harper"
wrote: "David Hansen" wrote in message .. . Trains consume large amounts of electricity. I hate to think what size the battery bank would be to run a railway on UPS. There would not be a standby generator, but a standby power station. Think in terms of the size of some of the old ones. You perhaps missed the report recently about the commissioning of a UPS to serve the town of Fairbanks, Alaska. Apparently it is the biggest NiCad battery array in the world. They don't have a grid connection outside Alaska apparently. There are some details of this at http://www.gvea.com/projects/bess.php . Produces 27 (eventually, 40) megawatts for 15 minutes; I haven't been able to find the specifications for how long it takes to get going, but I suppose it could be a true UPS. Cost is quoted as $35 million, and the batteries alone cost $10 million.The battery life is quoted as 10 to 20 years. Any useful equivalent for the LU would have to be at least ten times larger! Yes, it would be a big gas turbine. Would a few hundred MW be adequate, do you think? Trains take around a megawatt at full thunder, don't they? And there are around 500? Perhaps it might be interesting to think about installing much smaller UPSs or other generating capacity at each station. Centralised power generation isn't always the best way. (and no, I don't think going back to coal-powered trains would be a good idea) R |
#74
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Roland Perry wrote:
BBC reports that the Greenwich standby generator is "designed to power safety lights in trains and stations". The Times said something similar this morning. It seems we may have been seriously misled about the capability of the Greenwich power station. All this stuff about LU's legal obligation to have a second power supply. Not much good if it can't run the trains. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#75
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![]() "Richard J." wrote in message ... Roland Perry wrote: BBC reports that the Greenwich standby generator is "designed to power safety lights in trains and stations". The Times said something similar this morning. It seems we may have been seriously misled about the capability of the Greenwich power station. All this stuff about LU's legal obligation to have a second power supply. Not much good if it can't run the trains. Why not spit the trains up into groups so only a hand full would be moving at a time in a power cut? So group 1 gets the go ahead to move to the next station at 25% speed then when they all check in group 2 and so on to keep the loads on secondary power down. |
#76
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Roland Perry said:
In article , Chris Game writes The faults were generally reported as 'unrelated'. Do you know better? I haven't seen any reports that used the word "unrelated". The Energy Minister's comments on the BBC on Friday. For example: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/3190405.stm That report is entirely consistent with a theory that the second fault was triggered by the first. It even includes the expression "chain of events". The simplistic journalist's term 'Chain of Events' doesn't imply one event caused the next in the chain, it merely means one followed another. As yet there's no 'theory' to connect the two. My point is that if they're not related (i.e. with a common cause) then it's stretching the idea of co-incidence a bit to imagine two events happening within seven seconds. This point came up in the Three Mile Island enquiry, where apparently unrelated systems failed at the same time, the cause eventually being traced to design faults. The kind of reliability calculations that people thought protected them against disaster were thus found to be wrong (systems that were thought to be independent weren't, and probabilities therefore couldn't be multiplied together). -- ============================================= Chris Game chrisgame@!yahoo!dotcodotuk ============================================= |
#77
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BBC reports that the Greenwich standby generator is "designed to power
safety lights in trains and stations". The Times said something similar this morning. It seems we may have been seriously misled about the capability of the Greenwich power station. All this stuff about LU's legal obligation to have a second power supply. Not much good if it can't run the trains. Why not spit the trains up into groups so only a hand full would be moving at a time in a power cut? So group 1 gets the go ahead to move to the next station at 25% speed then when they all check in group 2 and so on to keep the loads on secondary power down. Or real low-tech solution: 1) On power cut all trains turn power to zero. Wait for return of power. 2) Each n minutes following return of power roll a die. 3) If you roll a 6, move at low power into next station. Would produce a phased increase in load. Or if total load is an issue when trying to maintain services, simply slow the timetable and require all units to run at a sufficiently low power setting. This would surely reduce total power consumption by 50%, even if it tripled journey times? Richard |
#78
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On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 21:13:24 +0000 (UTC) someone who may be "Peter
Masson" wrote this:- Where exactly is Hurst in Kent? The BBC has a little map that shows the system and rough positions. This link might take you to it, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h...263/html/1.stm if not then go to http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/3190143.stm and click on the "Open" bit in the "POWER CUT SOURCE" box near the bottom. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh | PGP email preferred-key number F566DA0E I will always explain revoked keys, unless the UK government prevents me using the RIP Act 2000. |
#79
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On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 18:55:09 +0000 (UTC) someone who may be "Terry
Harper" wrote this:- You perhaps missed the report recently about the commissioning of a UPS to serve the town of Fairbanks, Alaska. Apparently it is the biggest NiCad battery array in the world. They don't have a grid connection outside Alaska apparently. Why would a whole town need a UPS? Yes, it would be a big gas turbine. Would a few hundred MW be adequate, do you think? Google should pull up the "Power cuts and the Tube" thread on uk.railway of a week or two ago. That should have links to Greenwich, which was supposed to be able to power the central section of the London Underground if there was a Grid failure. I will be interested to see what the PFI contractors have to say about Greenwich when they explain their actions. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh | PGP email preferred-key number F566DA0E I will always explain revoked keys, unless the UK government prevents me using the RIP Act 2000. |
#80
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On 29 Aug 2003 09:56:23 -0700 someone who may be
(Richard Catlow) wrote this:- Perhaps a small scale in terms of the number of substations, or even the geographical area affected, but big in terms of consumers, megawatts, gigawatt hours and ciruits to which the surface railway are connected. Thanks for the information, which I am considering along with the BBC's map which may be at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h...263/html/1.stm as I said in an earlier message. Of course having this information makes me a terrorist, according to Section 58 of the Terrorism Act 2000, so you may not hear from me again for a while. We tried to restore supplies from Byfleet, Croydon and Northfleet 132kV supplies, but the voltage drop and charging currents involved made this a non runner. That is in essence the question that I think needs raising. DC railways have these high voltage circuits running along the lines, though feeding the London terminals is a rather different matter to some rural section. Looks like some NGC folk have got some explaining to do They are certainly the ones with the majority of the explaining to do. as have LUL. I think Mr Livingstone shot himself in the foot with his ill-informed criticism. As a result it may be difficult for him to ask the real questions that need answering. I wouldn't mind betting that the situation between LUL and EDF was uncertain immediately after the fault, whilst its impact was measured up. Eventually, LUL decided that it could be long time before supplies could be relied upon that they would take no chances and evacuate the trains and hey presto 20 minutes later in mid evacuation, the power comes back on. That is my suspicion too. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh | PGP email preferred-key number F566DA0E I will always explain revoked keys, unless the UK government prevents me using the RIP Act 2000. |
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