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33KV piglets was hv disease
Original poster: "bob by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <yubba-at-clara-dot-net>
hi Steveb,
Interesting thought 33kv piglets. i live in rural Cornwall and have of
course looked and taken photos of our local substation. as well as the 33kv
feeds it also hosts our very own wireless network feed into the fibre pipe.
Next time we have any hv engineers staying at our b and b i will find out
if they have any spare redundant piglets. of course this means a
bigger cap. Anyone know the break even point for voltage in to corona out?
My cure for hv disease is to live near the largest satellite tracking
station in the world, darn it.
cheers
bob
At 10:09 01/06/03 -0600, you wrote:
>Original poster: "Stephen Conner by way of Terry Fritz
><teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <steve-at-scopeboy-dot-com>
>
>At 17:15 31/05/03 -0600, you wrote:
>>Original poster: "Terry Fritz" <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>
>>
>>Hi Chris,
>>
>>Of course, just because one does not have room, power, equipment.... to
>>run a pole pig system, is no reason not to have a pig!! Here is mine ;-))
>
>What a dinky pig, really more of a piglet by the looks of it, how much
>does it weigh? I ought to mention that pigs here in Britain are usually
>about 40 years old and incredibly big and heavy. In the Scottish Highlands
>the distribution lines are so long that they tend to use 33kV straight to
>the pole outside your house. So there are a few 33kV to 240V pigs out
>there somewhere <evil cackle #3>
>
>Steve C.
>
>
>
>