"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
turn off light fixtures when changing bulbs. a small electricity arc can ignite the dry lint that accumulates around light fixtures.set a lint removal schedule and stick to it. ive used a long piece of conduit with tubing appropriate for compressed air inside, valve on one end and a nozzle on the other. wear ear/eye/breathing protection - knock down the lint around pipes, fixtures, etc. inspect electrical connections. make sure all connections are properly torqued and are not blackened/discolored/heated. inspect flashes for lint, internal wiring for discoloration.inspect fans for proper operation - ive had a small fan on a flash quit working (gummed up from spray tack) and it started smoking. make sure all your electrical panels are properly labeled so equipment can be cut from electricity in the event of an emergency
make sure all your electrical panels are properly labeled so equipment can be cut from electricity in the event of an emergency
Quotemake sure all your electrical panels are properly labeled so equipment can be cut from electricity in the event of an emergency ^^^ This. Once we had a fire in the warehouse from an electrical surge at an outside transformer100 yards away. Couldn't get to the panel to shut everything off because it was on fire. Iwent to an emergency cut-off at the other end of the building and we were able to extinguishthe flaming panel. I completely forgot about that little incident over 18 years ago.
i have 11 panels in this building. half of the labels were 20 years old and incorrect.
Quote from: Zelko-4-EVA on June 07, 2018, 01:33:42 PMturn off light fixtures when changing bulbs. a small electricity arc can ignite the dry lint that accumulates around light fixtures.set a lint removal schedule and stick to it. ive used a long piece of conduit with tubing appropriate for compressed air inside, valve on one end and a nozzle on the other. wear ear/eye/breathing protection - knock down the lint around pipes, fixtures, etc. inspect electrical connections. make sure all connections are properly torqued and are not blackened/discolored/heated. inspect flashes for lint, internal wiring for discoloration.inspect fans for proper operation - ive had a small fan on a flash quit working (gummed up from spray tack) and it started smoking. make sure all your electrical panels are properly labeled so equipment can be cut from electricity in the event of an emergency All excellent points. I would never have thought of the light fixture one, but makes perfect sense. I'm guiltyof having swapped bulbs with power on.We've added HVAC filter material to all the small fan "filters" on all of our equipment. The wire mesh ones are goodfor stopping small rocks but not much else.The ol' shop-vac is getting a workout this week.
Wasn’t Brandt back up and running in a matter of days? I think a good lesson here is to check your insurance. ??Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: CBCB on June 09, 2018, 07:50:33 PMWasn’t Brandt back up and running in a matter of days? I think a good lesson here is to check your insurance. ??Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe had power and full use of space in 24hrs. However we had no blanks we could print because all damaged by smoke. I highly suggest being on your A game with insurance. Also having money in reserve where you can start moves without waiting on insurance money is also key to little downtime. We were offered a advanced to get rolling but I had already started things rolling by then. Blanks reordered, breakers ordered, etc. So we are just keeping them informed on whats spent and why and check will be cut later.