One of these days my mind will remember I have no power and I'll stop flicking switches in my bathrooms and closets...
Curious as to how better centerpoint can prepare? We have buried lines and are without power. Additionally, you CAN access the map still if you have the link. I'm lost on what good an outage map serves you with outside of knowing sort of where you would be on a priority list.David_Puddy said:Zobel said:
The number of whiny titty babies on this thread that can't imagine a hurricane can knock out power for a couple of days is freaking hilarious.
Stomp your feet more.
Yeah let's just sit idly by while the 4th largest city who has hurricanes yearly is unprepared yet again. Not only that but the power company can't even host a f'ing map that's anywhere close to being accurate. Stupid post, but you knew that before you submitted it.
StringerBell said:
tbh tho it does feel like the grid is way more volatile than it was back 10-15 years ago but i suppose that's to be expected.
i remember growing up in houston and having hurricanes and i dont remember losing power for an extended amount of time.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Have the WX experts acknowledged a superior computer model?
Have they declared a clear winner this go round?
Who is in the running for the triple crown?
The next storm is the Preakness. Who do we need to keep an eye on? Which models are legit? Can they repeat their performance?
CowtownAg06 said:
What's everyone's thoughts on cell service and fiber? I'm with ATT and didn't lose either during the Derecho, but totally in the dark this time. (came to my office and it's good). Those power issues too or infrastructure?
David_Puddy said:Zobel said:
The number of whiny titty babies on this thread that can't imagine a hurricane can knock out power for a couple of days is freaking hilarious.
Stomp your feet more.
Yeah let's just sit idly by while the 4th largest city who has hurricanes yearly is unprepared yet again. Not only that but the power company can't even host a f'ing map that's anywhere close to being accurate. Stupid post, but you knew that before you submitted it.
Sea Speed said:David_Puddy said:Zobel said:
The number of whiny titty babies on this thread that can't imagine a hurricane can knock out power for a couple of days is freaking hilarious.
Stomp your feet more.
Yeah let's just sit idly by while the 4th largest city who has hurricanes yearly is unprepared yet again. Not only that but the power company can't even host a f'ing map that's anywhere close to being accurate. Stupid post, but you knew that before you submitted it.
Dude that never posts on tine board comes to tine board to bash tine board.
I checked around 1 yesterday and there were tons of hotels available so I didn't get one at the time. As we decided to leave for CS around 6pm I started looking for rooms and almost everything was showing sold out. We got lucky and got a room at Wingate in south SC but its pretty crappy. There were tons of linemen checking in when we got here around 8.David_Puddy said:Yordaddy said:
On Sunday driving I-10 E back into town there were a TON of utility trucks heading West from Columbus all the way into Houston. I am guessing they were headed to some staging area outside the city.
I drove to College Station around 10 last night. Literally every hotel I stopped at off of I-10 was completely full. Same for the 3 I stopped at in Navasota, including one they had about 20 utility trucks at it. I figured once I got to CS there would be plenty of rooms but I was quite wrong. Called about 20 hotels and finally the sh-tty Motel 6 on Texas had a room. This place is such a dump and the longer this carries on the more enraged I become with the incompetent morons who run our city. As mentioned, this was only a cat 1….i can't imagine if it was a cat 3 or 4.
It's been more than 24 hours. At what point does it become acceptable to be peeved about the situation?Zobel said:
It's stressful for everyone, it's not like the storm hit only yall in particular. Crying about it and getting mad from rage bait articles doesn't help.
It's unreasonable to expect everything to be back to normal less than 24 hrs later. Go clean up debris, you'll feel better and it'll be productive.
Zobel said:
It's stressful for everyone, it's not like the storm hit only yall in particular. Crying about it and getting mad from rage bait articles doesn't help.
It's unreasonable to expect everything to be back to normal less than 24 hrs later. Go clean up debris, you'll feel better and it'll be productive.
I booked a hotel for the week a while back because we are moving and I'll stay behind to finish things up, so I was ahead of the game once Beryl started creeping. Fast forward to yesterday, hotel lost power. Couldn't find anything else for last night. Did find one for the rest of the week, but camped at home last night.Texaggie7nine said:I checked around 1 yesterday and there were tons of hotels available so I didn't get one at the time. As we decided to leave for CS around 6pm I started looking for rooms and almost everything was showing sold out. We got lucky and got a room at Wingate in south SC but its pretty crappy. There were tons of linemen checking in when we got here around 8.David_Puddy said:Yordaddy said:
On Sunday driving I-10 E back into town there were a TON of utility trucks heading West from Columbus all the way into Houston. I am guessing they were headed to some staging area outside the city.
I drove to College Station around 10 last night. Literally every hotel I stopped at off of I-10 was completely full. Same for the 3 I stopped at in Navasota, including one they had about 20 utility trucks at it. I figured once I got to CS there would be plenty of rooms but I was quite wrong. Called about 20 hotels and finally the sh-tty Motel 6 on Texas had a room. This place is such a dump and the longer this carries on the more enraged I become with the incompetent morons who run our city. As mentioned, this was only a cat 1….i can't imagine if it was a cat 3 or 4.
trueaggie2782 said:StringerBell said:
tbh tho it does feel like the grid is way more volatile than it was back 10-15 years ago but i suppose that's to be expected.
i remember growing up in houston and having hurricanes and i dont remember losing power for an extended amount of time.
There were also a fraction of the people living here then than there are now. I feel like the grid didn't expand at the same rate as the people.
Anti-taxxer said:
Did I miss the golf cart update?? Did it survive??
still no powerMilwaukees Best Light said:
Any report on the golf cart in Sea Isle?
Quote:
More than 2.1 million customers lost power during Ian similar to the amount after other major storms but Eric Silagy, chief executive of Florida Power & Light, noted that all customers in places where the grid doesn't need to be rebuilt got back online within eight days. Roughly two-thirds of customers were online within 24 hours.
Some outside experts agreed with the praise. "Fewer people lost power than I would have expected, given the physical size and ferocity of the storm," said Michael Webber, an energy scholar at the University of Texas at Austin.
Quote:
The state's utility companies have invested billions to strengthen the electrical grid in recent years, hoping to avoid a prolonged mass blackout after a catastrophic tropical cyclone. When Hurricane Ian hit southwest Florida in late September, a 44,000-strong army of electrical workers from all over the country stood on standby for repairs.
I did not ask how long I should be prepared for. I asked when I should be allowed to be peeved about it since you are apparently the one that is deciding for everyone.Zobel said:
After a hurricane? Serious answer - you should be prepared to not have power for a week.
Based on his posts, I'd guess we found the Centerpoint IT manager's Texags handle.Nitro Power said:
Serious question, do you live in Houston?