jayelbee said:
What's with the bottled water? If I need water, I just turn on the faucet and fill up a glass.
jayelbee said:
Seriously though, I'm not overly concerned about that being in a mud where I personally know the operator. I would be much more concerned if I were on CoH water.
State law says that all water utilities in Harris, Fort Bend, and Montgomery counties have an emergency power generator in some form or another. My experience is they are all permanently installed onsite. That law was one of the results of Ike. Of course, generators have been known to fail....CDUB98 said:jayelbee said:
Seriously though, I'm not overly concerned about that being in a mud where I personally know the operator. I would be much more concerned if I were on CoH water.
Well, ya know, if that MUD happens to lose electricity, you gots no water no matter who the operator is.
Does it have a generator backup?
From the article:claym711 said:
https://spacecityweather.com/harvey-late-night-some-final-thursday-thoughts/
These guys don't seem too concerned.
Quote:
As I've said, it's either going to be pretty bad, or really really bad here.
Oh thank God. You can replace things but not people. Well, at least not those people. The rest of us really are just redundant.Quote:
Basically places where rich people live will be mostly ok.
Dirty Mike and the Boys said:From the article:claym711 said:
https://spacecityweather.com/harvey-late-night-some-final-thursday-thoughts/
These guys don't seem too concerned.Quote:
As I've said, it's either going to be pretty bad, or really really bad here.
I wouldn't trust that source for a second.Cromagnum said:
Waiting to see if radar shows anything crazy like the skull Ivan did awhile back.
cone said:
I mean the vast majority of forecast models that predict rainfall accumulation are predicting 20+ inches of rain from Sun - Tues and have done so consistently for the past 48 hours. Other than the extremely slight chance the storm drifts south, the system is going to eventually have to track in a NE direction. The only way, at this point, it doesn't dump a **** ton of rain over Houston is if it manages to track back far enough east over the GOM before it heads NE. Either way, its not really a concern to me if you choose to disregard a weather event that has a fair amount of forecast agreement or not, but evacuations are entirely situation-dependent. I live within both the 100 and 500 year flood plains, and I don't feel like spending a 72 hour period trapped at my place with (potentially) intermittent power.claym711 said:
Right, so as of now, it looks like somewhat of a non-event for Houston. Heavy rain. It it comes inland and camps over houston, there will be flooding. That's far from a certainty and hardly evacuation worthy.
Fitch said:
Headed to Dallas as well tomorrow. Best guess how the roads will be around lunch time?