Mine is fine since the power came back at 3:15 this morning. It even worked for that 10 minutes around midnight that we had power.
No issues with gas.
No issues with gas.
where do you evac to that has no CO2, the moonGuitarsoup said:
Meanwhile, on the neighborhood Facebook group
The Lost said:Fitch said:
Old discussion, but more relevant every passing year: At some point the City / Centerpoint just has to figure out how to bury distribution lines. This doesn't happen in other metros.
Saying this as one who has built subdivisions with buried electrical which weathered the derecho and Beryl fine, but am spending another balmy evening without power in the heights.
It's not that they don't know how, it's they know people don't want the rate raise that would be needed to do it.
CAR96 said:
Yes I heard Tachus service was never lost. Heard Verizon was doing well, ATT to be spotty.
CAR96 said:
Anyone with Tachus internet service?
Can you comment on how their service has been during the post storm conditions?
BQ_90 said:where do you evac to that has no CO2, the moonGuitarsoup said:
Meanwhile, on the neighborhood Facebook group
BQ_90 said:where do you evac to that has no CO2, the moonGuitarsoup said:
Meanwhile, on the neighborhood Facebook group
Ag06Law said:BQ_90 said:where do you evac to that has no CO2, the moonGuitarsoup said:
Meanwhile, on the neighborhood Facebook group
The issue here is CO, not CO2. Chemistry can be hard.
I just moved into the hood. My power came on around 345-4pm, but a transformer blew around 9:30pm. Another long hot night.atmtws said:
Got power back in 77009 around 4:30. Made a few circles around the neighborhood throughout the day and never once saw a CP truck. Did see multiple Public Works trucks though clearing downed trees from the streets. Hang in there everyone!
Pics from a street over:
The Lost said:Fitch said:
Old discussion, but more relevant every passing year: At some point the City / Centerpoint just has to figure out how to bury distribution lines. This doesn't happen in other metros.
Saying this as one who has built subdivisions with buried electrical which weathered the derecho and Beryl fine, but am spending another balmy evening without power in the heights.
It's not that they don't know how, it's they know people don't want the rate raise that would be needed to do it.
plowboy1065 said:
I'm in a cult de sac and half of it has power and the other half doesn't. Makes no F*ng sense
AgLiving06 said:
Anybody in Kingwood know where there's reliable gasoline?
My dad said HEB has it, but long lines...the junky CenterPoint map showed the front of kingwood may be doing better on power.
He's got about a days worth of gasoline before he's got to venture farther out to find more.
AgLiving06 said:
Anybody in Kingwood know where there's reliable gasoline?
My dad said HEB has it, but long lines...the junky CenterPoint map showed the front of kingwood may be doing better on power.
He's got about a days worth of gasoline before he's got to venture farther out to find more.
Marauder Blue 6 said:AgLiving06 said:
Anybody in Kingwood know where there's reliable gasoline?
My dad said HEB has it, but long lines...the junky CenterPoint map showed the front of kingwood may be doing better on power.
He's got about a days worth of gasoline before he's got to venture farther out to find more.
Neighbors in 77346 found some on 1960 east toward Dayton.
BowSowy said:Then that's completely uselessCDUB98 said:
The devil is in the details. The map is say the circuit is energized, that's it. And it very well could be true, but local conditions on the ground prevent certain local circuits from connecting.
Yea....the panicky toilet paper crowd is back at it again...only it's gas this time. Dumbasses.AgLiving06 said:
Anybody in Kingwood know where there's reliable gasoline?
My dad said HEB has it, but long lines...the junky CenterPoint map showed the front of kingwood may be doing better on power.
He's got about a days worth of gasoline before he's got to venture farther out to find more.
3 hours of sleep in 48 hours is getting me there tootexasaggie2015 said:
I'm officially starting to lose my mind
Quote:
But even if we don't go to that extreme...we as a city have normalized losing 100k-500k customers to outages in our normal storm events.
CDUB98 said:Quote:
But even if we don't go to that extreme...we as a city have normalized losing 100k-500k customers to outages in our normal storm events.
This is an exaggeration to tote your bias around on.
The derecho was not a normal storm event.
You've been completely proven wrong on costs by the posters here who actually do it, but I guess your pride won't allow you to come out of your delusion, because then you'd have to admit your whole CP ***** shtick is a fabrication.
CowtownAg06 said:
I've been thinking about the "this is only a Cat 1" comments and comparing this damage to Ike. I'm sure there will be much more about this with better analysis, but I think the way Beryl maintained it's strength through the Houston Metro area allowed it to punch much higher than a Cat 1. I have wind data at IAH Beryl and peaked at 55 mph. Ike peaked at, you guessed it, 55 mph. Ike had 3 hours over 50 mph while Beryl was only 2.
I know there will be much better ways to look at this, but I wanted to point out that part of the reason this feels like Ike (cat 3/4) is because it was like Ike as it hit our major populations.
Not that should make anyone feel better, but hopefully explains what we are dealing with a little bit.