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RickOShea wrote:monkeyboy7 wrote:
Second, up to half of the water going over the falls can be diverted for power generation. This way, Niagara Falls is electrically self-sufficient; the power grid won't go down in the case of a zombie apocalypse. Oh, and the power source is renewable.
If the NPCC regional grid is like most of the others in North America, then many of the generation plants in the NPCC will be tied together thru the transmission line "grid". That way, if one generation plant has a catastrophic failure, the other plants on the "grid" can put their reserve capacity on-line to, hopefully, keep there from being rolling black-outs or a system-wide cascade failure.
So, you're gonna need a whole lot of transmission linemen and system engineers to go out and operate the "grid" open points and interconnects to isolate the Niagara Falls plant to the immediate area.....And most likely to restart the plant, since it will have probably tripped every downline breaker and recloser within 500 miles when the other plants went "off line" and the remaining ones got over-loaded.
Then you'll need a bunch of distribution linemen and engineers to go out and "re-start" all the individual substations and circuits to get the 120/240 to your house.
Then you'll have to start thinking about all the personnel, equipment, and replacement parts & materials you'd need to maintain it all.
Just sayin'.
Ten Eight wrote:RickOShea wrote:
It looks like Florida and Texax have their own "regional grid". Why is this?

squinty wrote:What? Damn I thought this was match.com. No wonder my profile didn't get any hits....

Krustofski wrote:I'm just two fucks short of a shitton of food. Please keep in mind that the metric shitton is slightly larger than the US customary shitton.
Jennamoriss wrote:a good sustainable location should be somewhere near a good for drink water source , a place where you can find food easily ( hunt ) and a place where you can rest your body in peace , do the math
Doc Torr wrote:"Those who live by the sword get shot by those who see them coming a hundred yards away."
roscoe wrote:.....and don't plan on being The Humongous - it ain't happening.
Ten Eight wrote:RickOShea wrote:monkeyboy7 wrote:
Second, up to half of the water going over the falls can be diverted for power generation. This way, Niagara Falls is electrically self-sufficient; the power grid won't go down in the case of a zombie apocalypse. Oh, and the power source is renewable.
If the NPCC regional grid is like most of the others in North America, then many of the generation plants in the NPCC will be tied together thru the transmission line "grid". That way, if one generation plant has a catastrophic failure, the other plants on the "grid" can put their reserve capacity on-line to, hopefully, keep there from being rolling black-outs or a system-wide cascade failure.
So, you're gonna need a whole lot of transmission linemen and system engineers to go out and operate the "grid" open points and interconnects to isolate the Niagara Falls plant to the immediate area.....And most likely to restart the plant, since it will have probably tripped every downline breaker and recloser within 500 miles when the other plants went "off line" and the remaining ones got over-loaded.
Then you'll need a bunch of distribution linemen and engineers to go out and "re-start" all the individual substations and circuits to get the 120/240 to your house.
Then you'll have to start thinking about all the personnel, equipment, and replacement parts & materials you'd need to maintain it all.
Just sayin'.
It looks like Florida and Texax have their own "regional grid". Why is this?
Tater Raider wrote:Any other thoughts I might have on the matter don't belong on ZS.

LyraJean wrote:Ten Eight wrote:RickOShea wrote:
It looks like Florida and Texax have their own "regional grid". Why is this?
Because we're awesome!![]()

squinty wrote:What? Damn I thought this was match.com. No wonder my profile didn't get any hits....

RickOShea wrote:LyraJean wrote:Ten Eight wrote:RickOShea wrote:
It looks like Florida and Texax have their own "regional grid". Why is this?
Because we're awesome!![]()
I wouldn't go that far. IIRC, California and the part of Florida under the FRCC grid were the two areas in the worst shape, as far as keeping up with growth and load demand.
Matter of fact, PowerSouth and the Southern Company assured us a few years ago that they have taken the measures necessary to keep a cascade failure in the FRCC from affecting the SERC grid.
LyraJean wrote:That is what the smiley is for. Hubby and I are actually trying to get out of Florida.
Tater Raider wrote:Any other thoughts I might have on the matter don't belong on ZS.

Tater Raider wrote:LyraJean wrote:That is what the smiley is for. Hubby and I are actually trying to get out of Florida.
I suggest heading north to start with, possibly west once you've gone a ways...
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