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melev

Snow - my favorite topic; & a power outage to deal with

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I've lived in Fort Worth, Texas since I was 17. We get about one inch of snow one day a year, and the following day it is gone. People in our area usually have no idea how to drive on the stuff because it is so rare, and chaos ensues. I usually enjoy the view from the comfort of my home, sipping on hot cocoa. There's no reason to risk my life or my vehicle with so many clueless drivers out.

The snow came in last night and it was gorgeous. I was up late, enjoying the huge flakes dropping to the ground, seeing the blanket covering my dormant lawn grow thicker overnight. When I woke up, I was delighted to see the snow was still there. Around 12:00 p.m., the power went out. Within an hour, my neighbor stopped by to ask if I had power, and that he was told it wouldn't be fixed until 5 p.m.

Immediately, I put on my shoes and hooked up the generator. There was no reason to delay, and within a few minutes power was fed to the reef tank, the tv, and my computer. The generator was chained up at the garage door, pumping the exhaust toward the street. Cords were run from the generator through the doorway going into the fishroom on the garage side and then through the next door that leads into the kitchen. Because it was cold, the doors were shut, but were still ajar about 1" to accommodate the power cords.

I turned on the return pump, skimmer, calcium reactor, heaters, Aqua Controller III, the Dart pump (manifold), the Vortech pumps, but not the lighting. Over the course of the afternoon, the temperature of the tank continued to drop ever so slowly. Normally, my reef runs 79 to 81F so when I saw it hit 77F I grew apprehensive. Some of my corals are several years old and tend to react badly; they can be pretty finicky if the occasion warrants it. Even with three heaters, the tank was cooling down hour by hour, which was caused by the house being 67F and the doors being cracked open which let in cold air.

In addition, both my son and I both were suffering from headaches, and I'm guessing it was the fumes blowing back into the house. The best solution is to put the generator in the backyard and run permanent wiring through the walls / attic to keep those fumes outside.

When the power came back on, I restarted all the equipment again including the lights. Now that the home's HVAC was running, the house warmed up again and the tank's temperature reached 80F.

I went outside around 1 a.m. this morning to take some pictures of the snow, and as I type this, the power is out again. In a few minutes, I may be forced to start up the generator anew. Here are those pictures I took. It's bright outside because of the blanket of snow which is a neat effect.





My backyard




Fluffy white stuff.






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Updated 02-12-2010 at 06:59 PM by Jessy

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  1. landlord's Avatar
    Snow in DFW Texas, is that like rain in Southern Caifornia?

    Nice Pictures!

    I'm glad others get to do the "Generator shuffle" from time to time besides myself.
  2. Trido's Avatar
    Wow! Thats quite a blanket of snow and a pretty messy street. Sorry to hear about the headaches, the wind must have been blowing just right. Kinda scary if you think real hard about it. Up North, there are deaths every winter during power outages from that exact thing.

    When you can spare it, a few hundred dollars will afford an electrician to install a generator transfer switch for you. After having one, I'll likley always have one reef tank or not. There are several benefits to them. Instead of pluggin in cords, I flip six rocker switches, I get to keep the doors closed. I run my refrigerator and household lighting, and best of all, the "Gentrans" have meters that let me know how many watts your using. With a six thousand watt honda, I am able to run my whole tank system if I keep other parts of the house shut down.

    Thanks for sharing your pictures of the snow. We didnt get any in Seattle this winter.
  3. NATUREBATSLAST's Avatar
    The best generator I've seen out there is a Prius...
    http://www.wikihow.com/Use-a-Toyota-...ckup-Generator
    Hope everything works out OK, great pics!

    By the way, that snow was bound for Maine, and we want it back!
  4. Paulo's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by NATUREBATSLAST
    The best generator I've seen out there is a Prius...
    http://www.wikihow.com/Use-a-Toyota-...ckup-Generator
    Hope everything works out OK, great pics!

    By the way, that snow was bound for Maine, and we want it back!
    That is interesting but it is backfeeding power into house which is dangerous to utility workers, This does not disconnect power for mains unless someone shuts off the main disconect breaker(which people usually dont). That is why a transfer switch is the best choice when adding any type generator to house wiring. New generatos made have natural gas hookups with gasoline backups and do weekly/monthly startups to makes sure they operate and I had a tank as nice as melev I would definately have one lol. Melev, snow looks nice down there. We were lucky in mich and did not get that first snow storm. The second one hit us and we got 8 inches. People here are more used to it but still drive like crap lol.
  5. Pescaiolo's Avatar
    Nice pics Marc! I haven't seen snow up close in 3 years. Gotta love San Diego.

    Contrary to popular belief it does rain in Socal. We just don't get it as much year round. It kinda dumps here for 2 months and its pretty much dry the rest of the year.
  6. TheBChamp's Avatar
    Wow thats crazy... must be kind of devastating for you guys down there when that happens?.. We've had that look outside since the beginning of December..lol.. and we usually loose power in the summer. Either way though a generator would be nice... eventually
  7. melev's Avatar
    We just don't have enough of it to have a good method to deal with it. The city probably feels they are doing enough, but what we had really should not have warranted the type out outages we suffered. This wasn't 12" or more nor was it an ongoing storm. Other states that deal with it for months on end are well-prepared and have made the necessary adjustments.
  8. TheBChamp's Avatar
    Yeah yeah for sure.. my father lives in florida actually and I remember his wife telling me that about 30 years ago it snowed in Tampa, and it was just chaos.