[AT] Shhhh! Quiet==electrical
Larry Goss
rlgoss at insightbb.com
Thu Dec 31 08:37:19 PST 2009
Thirty Amp! Wow! You had power to spare. My next door neighbor had 5 amp 110 volt service on their house when me moved there. It got upgraded to 220 volt service and the power company left the old meter. I "glommed" onto it and wired it up so I could check the power usage on some of the simple appliances. Unfortunately, the meter was so small that you couldn't use it for something like a refrigerator or window air conditioner, so it wasn't as handy as it could have been.
I finally got tired of having it kick around in the garage and sold in in a garage sale. The guy who bought it had a collection of electrical hardware, and he was bouncing off the walls because he was so happy to have found that meter.
Larry
----- Original Message -----
From: CEE VILL <cvee60 at hotmail.com>
Date: Thursday, December 31, 2009 6:46
Subject: Re: [AT] Shhhh! Quiet==electrical
To: new atislist <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>
> That is a familiar situation, Larry, but ours was not as
> severe. As a kid, our house with seven large rooms had
> it's original 30 amp electrical service (115v only)
> that was pretty much intended for lights only in the 19 teens.
> As I recall there were only two circuits, each with a screw in
> 15A fuse (often operating with a penny behind each). When I was
> six, Dad had a wood/coal fired forced air furnace installed.
> Within a year or two, we also got our first TV set, a 12 inch
> black and white Philco combination with am/fm radio and a record
> changer. For years, every time the blower motor in the
> furnace was in startup, the tv picture would go black, or dim
> down and flip flop in several directions. When I sold the house
> nearly 50 years later, it was still running thru that same 30A
> service along with a couple of add on circuits that I installed
> as an adult to reduce some of the load on the main box.
> One of these fed the furnace so the TV was no longer starved.
>
> Charlie in WNY
>
>
>
>
>
> > Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2009 23:02:44 -0600
> > From: rlgoss at insightbb.com
> > To: at at lists.antique-tractor.com
> > Subject: Re: [AT] Shhhh! Quiet==electrical
> >
> > Low voltage is not uncommon around underground mines,
> Ed. When I moved to West Virginia in 1971, it was not
> uncommon for the voltage to drop to the point that our TV set
> couldn't show a picture. I put a recording voltmeter on
> the line for a couple of weeks to see what was happening.
> The whole town was networked so there was a "220 volt" grid
> everywhere that houses tapped into whereever they wanted.
> No one had individual step-down transformers. When the
> mine machinery kicked in at the beginning of the morning shift,
> the voltage on the grid would drop and each leg would be below
> 90 volts. It would slowly come back to nearly normal by
> quitting time every day.
> >
> > My kids were in pre-school at the time. The voltage drop
> kicked television viewing in the head and they routinely missed
> Sesame Street. The house load was unbalanced, and I found
> I could get more reliable use of the television set by changing
> the load assignment in the breaker box. Of course, when
> the miners returned home at night, the machinery was off, the
> voltage came back up, and everybody enjoyed prime-time viewing.
> >
> > Such is life in the Kanawha valley.
> >
> > Larry
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
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