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HillModerator
Master Guide


Reged: 10/31/04
Posts: 9341
Loc: Southern California
High Power Job
      #1068622 - 12/08/07 11:15 PM

View in Google Earth         View in Google Maps (1235 downloads)


Watch this video of a real high voltage high wire act. It was shot near Beltzville Lake in Pennsylvania. The placemarks show where the copter first gets to the lines and the approximate area where the linemen are working. Very impressive footage.




Video link
Quote:

We are currently experiencing issues with Flash 10. If you are using this, please be patient while we work to fix the problem.




Alternate Youtube site is lower resolution, but you can use it if the Glumbert site doesn't load.



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csmith_Traveler
Cartographer


Reged: 09/14/05
Posts: 213
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1069051 - 12/09/07 12:57 PM

Very, very COOL!!!

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geveN
Cartographer


Reged: 03/08/07
Posts: 279
Loc: New Zealand
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1069206 - 12/09/07 05:27 PM

Awesome and amazing...........all kinds go to make this world and some people have the grit, courage and determination to do jobs others would find impossible.

There is a new series on CNN called CNN Heroes and its worth watching for ordinary individuals who stand out by doing something extraordinary.

The most ironical is the thousands of people who do the very out of the ordinary, but remain unnoticed throughout their lives.

In way out villages in India where no modern tools have reached, very often not even electricity, the unsung heroes are those who clean out the toilets, carrying the waste on buckets perched on their heads to a disposal pit, walking some distance; and these are the untouchables, a class who no one will socialise with, in fact they are treated with contempt and allowed to live in a secluded part of the village. And, Mahatma Gandhi, an extraordinary man, is the one of the first on record who sat down and shared his food with these unfortunate individuals!

geveN

--------------------
geveN


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Diane9247
Humanitarian


Reged: 01/15/07
Posts: 2035
Loc: Californian in Oregon
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1069367 - 12/10/07 12:00 AM

OH WOW!!! This is sort of magical and the narrator is so poetic! Thanks for finding and sharing this, Hill.

Cheers,
Diane

--------------------
Women for Women International - For the special needs of women surviving war.
Kiva - Small loans changing lives around the world.
Bukavu Foundation - For the Panzi Women's Shelter & other programs in Eastern Congo.
Room to Read - Change begins with educated children.


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Noel_B
Master Gamer


Reged: 07/27/05
Posts: 1516
Loc: Sligo, Ireland
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1070339 - 12/11/07 03:13 AM

Truly amzing. enough said.

--------------------
Last one out, please turn off the light.

Ireland in 1898

Battles - Friends in time - Honda

We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.


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TheLedgeModerator
Master Guide


Reged: 01/30/06
Posts: 11785
Loc: East London. UK
Re: High Power Job [Re: geveN]
      #1070348 - 12/11/07 03:22 AM

Quote:

The most ironical is the thousands of people who do the very out of the ordinary, but remain unnoticed throughout their lives.





You are so right Geve, these are the people who, sometimes forgotten, sometimes ignored that keep the Cities around the world "ticking"

Without these people, it would all come to a grind.

--------------------
One day you may be the Bug, another you may be the Windshield





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geveN
Cartographer


Reged: 03/08/07
Posts: 279
Loc: New Zealand
Re: High Power Job [Re: TheLedge]
      #1070854 - 12/11/07 02:14 PM

Hello TheLedge

Absolutely! I had this electricity blackout some weeks now and since it was very cold then in Auckland, I requested the Power Supply chaps to somehow get things going that night itself.

A Service-man turned up at around 11.00 p. m. and climbed up the electric pole, on the main road, and was there
up in the cold for around half hour.

When he had finished I made it a point to wave him a goodnight and thank you as he drove off!!!

Geve

--------------------
geveN


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HillModerator
Master Guide


Reged: 10/31/04
Posts: 9341
Loc: Southern California
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1128619 - 03/08/08 10:42 PM

This post by spokaneman has some more information about the narrator and the original source of the video clip.

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saukko
Master Arctic Guide


Reged: 09/07/05
Posts: 1230
Loc: Helsinki, Finland
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1129174 - 03/09/08 04:27 PM

Really amazing !

How many things in this world I don't know !
Calm and friendly narration with what you do in your everyday job.
Really get philosophic when looking at that video.
Five stars to him !

--------------------
Cheers,
saukko


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HillModerator
Master Guide


Reged: 10/31/04
Posts: 9341
Loc: Southern California
Re: High Power Job [Re: Hill]
      #1138303 - 03/24/08 05:04 PM



Here's an amateur video of some line maintenance shot from the ground. It looks and sounds like a windy day.

Quote:

What’s it like to repair a live powerline from a helicopter? We find out from the pros.

By Carrie Connolly

Fort Wayne Reader

2004-09-13

During the summer of 2003 the northeast corridor was hit with a blackout of enormous proportions. At 3pm elevators, subways, traffic lights, and your favorite daytime soap all shut down as the lights went out throughout the northeastern United States and Canada. Those of us who still had electricity watched thousands of New Yorkers stream out of offices into the streets of Manhattan.



Terrorism was the first thought that sprang to mind for many people on that hot August afternoon. Fortunately, the truth was less sinister and more akin to a car owner running into trouble after ignoring scheduled maintenance on his vehicle. What sent a good chunk of the Northeastern grid down for the count on August 14, 2003 was, of all things, a tree limb contacting a high voltage power line. It set off a domino effect where various lines tripped out, shutting themselves off one after the other in a well-designed protective measure, and the lights went out from New York to Detroit.



Regular vehicle tune-ups can be put off until they are missed and the engine makes a funny noise or a tire blows on the highway. The same is true with power lines, especially the extra high voltage lines that tower head and shoulders above the rest. These giants are the hard working backbone of the electric grid in the United States and Canada. They transmit power from numerous generation stations to the smaller distribution lines throughout neighborhoods and towns that in turn deliver the power each business and home needs for our many electrical needs. Part of what keeps these EHV lines humming is helicopter-based inspection and maintenance.



With the year anniversary of the blackout just past us, we had a chance to catch up with the aerial crew from Agrotors, Inc of Gettysburg, PA who was the first to inspect the damaged line from a helicopter. Although this job at First Energy was strictly inspection, Agrotors’ Powerline division performs live line maintenance on high voltage transmission lines through out its northeastern U.S. territory. Daniel “Spider “ Lockhart performed the detailed comprehensive inspection of First Energy’s lines once the power was restored.



So, what’s it like to repair an incredibly powerful, high voltage, live power line from a helicopter?



Spider explains what’s called “bonding-on” for the layperson. “First, we put a platform on the skids of the helicopter. Next a wire is attached from the platform to the body of the helicopter. Then hardware and equipment are loaded onto the platform. The lineman and pilot put on hot suits with hoods. Finally a steel wand called a hot stick is attached to the platform.”



A hot suit looks very much like a burlap sack fashioned into a flight suit. Spider explained, “These are to take and distribute the flow of electricity over them as if they were working in a steel cage. This was a theory developed in the late 1880’s by Michael Faraday. He theorized that if you could suspend a man in mid air inside of a steel cage electricity wouldn’t bother him.” What Spider takes for granted after years of working around energized lines is the distinct sensation of pins and needles that one feels while wearing the hot suit. The electricity is literally buzzing all around you.



The pilot takes off with the lineman securely attached to the platform and maneuvers the helicopter into position hovering next to the line. The sequence continues as the lineman prepares to bond on. The lineman touches the wand to the wire and as a result energizes the aircraft. Once energized a bond wire approximately 5 foot long is clamped onto the wire. The length gives the helicopter a certain amount of movement with out pulling off the line. It is a breakaway clamp so that the helicopter can pull off quickly without endangering the crew or the line. The wand is removed and the lineman begins his work.


Bonding on is a precise operation that requires intense concentration from the pilot and the lineman team. But as Spider explained, the phrase,” be quiet I’m concentrating” has little meaning in the charged atmosphere of power line maintenance. “The noise of the helicopter is overridden by the arcing taking place whenever the platform wand is brought into contact with the conductor. Until the wand is physically touching the conductor wire, the noise continues. Once contact is made there is a moderate to loud humming noise. It sounds like a noise you hear at a power transformer station. I describe it as the turning of the generator turbines at a power station, noisy.” The noise is something like the sound of the light saber in Star Wars; hard to describe but unmistakable when you hear it.



The arc is the burst of light created by the transfer of electricity. Electricity streaking between the wand and the wire is incredible. Viewed from the ground the arc appears to shoot from the lineman’s hand like lightning from an electrified comic book hero. For an Agrotors Powerline crew that’s just part of bonding on so they can get to work.



Up in the air with the blades whirling overhead, getting to work is a delicate aerial dance between the pilot and the wires. If he doesn’t get close enough the lineman can’t bond on but getting too close to the wrong wire can cause a flash-over in which electrical clearance is violated.



Spider explains electrical clearance as the minimum distance an object can be from an energized power line to not have the possibility of the electricity arcing over from the line to the object. If the electrical clearance is violated, the line will de-energize, like what happened with the branch that caused the whole problem in the first place.



But what would happen to the helicopter and the people in it? “If we violate the electrical clearance, we have provided the electricity a quick path to ground,” Spider says. “It will dramatically increase the current flow, immediately creating extreme heat. This in turn will melt metal and burn anything in its path to ground.” Line work is clearly not a do-it-yourself project.



The market for this highly focused method of repairing and maintaining extra high voltage power lines is only expected to grow. Publicly traded electric utilities are pushed by shareholders to reduce costs in an effort to increase share price. Cost savings are often attained by scaling back or delaying perceived non-critical projects such as yearly tree trimming or routine inspections.



A vehicle owner experiences the same false sense of security after skipping an oil change; after all the car still drives fine. The utility world is not much different, the lines keep humming and this benign neglect is rewarded through higher earnings. Consumer demand for affordable electricity drives operators to push the maximum voltage through these transmission lines to an ever growing array of smaller distribution lines that feed the suburban sprawl which is partly behind this increasing need for more power. Combine these two variables with line sag, an issue rarely mentioned outside of the power industry, and you have a recipe for future power outages just like the one on August 14, 2003.




Edited by Hill (03/24/08 05:07 PM)


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