Uptime? What uptime?
Life 05/15/2005 |Prairie and I were in the midst of getting ready for dinner and a movie on Friday evening (which consists of Prairie cooking while I make appreciative “yum!” noises as I sniff the air) when suddenly all the power in my apartment went out. Power outage? The building across the street still had power…and so did the hallway in my building, as did my neighbor (who, as always, is quite happy to provide his own soundtrack to my life).
Crud. My apartment had no power. I checked the breaker box in my apartment, but all four breakers looked fine…and besides, with four breakers, any one of them popping would take out part of the apartment, not the whole thing. This wasn’t looking good.
After a bit of panicking, I tracked down the emergency number for the power company and gave them a call. After being reassured that my power hadn’t been turned off — even though I’m a bit behind on that bill, even the power company isn’t grouchy enough to kill someone’s power at 7:30 at night, long after the customer service center has closed for the weekend — we determined that it had to be the master breaker for my apartment.
I wandered out into the hall and started looking for an obvious breaker box. Sure enough, there were some promising-looking boxes at the end of the hallway. Two smaller boxes, one with a single breaker switch, and two larger boxes. Not knowing which was which, I popped open the smaller of the two large boxes.
Bingo — circuit breakers. Old circuit breakers, to be sure, but circuit breakers. I found the breakers for my apartment (all the way at the very top, of course), found the dead one, and swapped it out with a new breaker from the small pile conveniently left at the bottom of the breaker box. This is pretty old technology, which amuses me — the breakers are about the size of the base of a light bulb, and screw into their sockets. But hey, it works. Plus, there’s these three intimidating-looking things at the bottom of the breaker box — I’ve got no clue what they are, but they look pretty cool.
I was curious, though, about what was in that second, larger box, since all the breakers for the units on my floor were in this box. So, I popped it open — and immediately my eyes went wide and I took a small step backwards. I’m not often faced with “Yikes!” moments, but…
…when I opened the box, I was faced with six more of the intimidating-looking somethings like the three in the smaller box. What really took me off guard, though, was the huge, evil-looking switch that dominated the top two thirds of the box. I’ve never seen one of these switches in the real world — it’s something straight out of old horror movies, Igor poised, one hand on the handle, waiting for his master to command him to complete the circuit and bring his monster to life.
What makes me even more curious, though, is that the switch is currently down, in the “off” position. I can’t tell you how tempting it was to grab it, give a mad cackle, and wildly throw it up, completing the circuit, and…well, I don’t know what, which is precisely why I didn’t touch it. For all I know, it could be entirely disconnected from the actual electric system in the building and be entirely non-functional — but, then again, what if it’s not? So — after calling Prairie down the hall to take a look at this beast — I closed the box, leaving the switch untouched.
Back into the apartment we went, reveling in the fact that I had power again. Prairie started to finish the last little touches of dinner, and I took stock of the apartment. Clock’s going to need to be reset, everything else looks good, computers are rebooting…
“Oh, crap.”
Prairie poked her head out from the kitchen. “What’s up?”
I started laughing. “This is so geeky….”
“Oh?”
“Well,” and I pointed at my webserver as it finished booting. “There’s a certain amount of ‘geek pride’ in a server’s ‘uptime’ — how long it’s been since a machine had to be restarted. My webserver’s been running uninterrupted for almost a year — until tonight! I was at ten or eleven months without a reboot until that breaker popped!”
I’m pretty sure that Prairie did her best to be sympathetic, though she had to do so between bouts of giggling at me.
It was almost a year, though!
“
Ah, well. At least it won’t hurt quite as much when I have to shut it down in a few months to move once Prairie and I find an apartment for both of us.
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“Brandenburg Concerto for Violin in G Major, No.4, BWV1049, II. Andante” by Rees, Jonathan/Scottish Ensemble from the album Bach: Brandenburg Concertos, Violin Concertos (1998, 3:41).
[See also: Goodbye (and Good Riddance) Alfaretta! | We Have Power | Photo Flood Finished | Folklife 2005 | Prairie’s birthday ]
6 Responses to “Uptime? What uptime?”
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May 15th, 2005 at 9:15 pm
Those aren’t circuit breakers, they’re fuses: screw-in fuses and cartridge fuses. And yes it does make me feel old to correct you about that, whippersnapper. (That’s also a ton of live electrical surfaces to have out in the open, unlocked like that: do you have good renter’s fire insurance for your stuff, and does your landlord have good liability insurance for electrocuted children and tenants?)
You got almost a year of uptime, with 1950s wiring and no UPS? I’m impressed: my power goes off so much I’ve long since stopped setting any clocks that aren’t battery-backed. Around here, it’s always 12:00, 12:00, 12:00.
May 16th, 2005 at 6:41 am
I’m younger than our friend Michael, and I was about to correct him on the fuse/breaker confusion. So it’s not really a matter of young whippersnapper-ism…
But almost a year of uptime… that’s pretty impressive!
May 16th, 2005 at 9:48 am
Fuse! I had a sneaking suspicion that the wrong word was in my head while I was writing that, but nothing else was coming to the forefront. Shouldn’t have been that difficult, I’ve changed fuses before in other situations…
Unfortunately, no — it’s always been one of those “I really should do that” plans that never gets done. So far I’ve come out on the winning end of that particular gamble (knock on wood), but I’d like to look into it at my next apartment.
I’ve got no real clue there. For their sake, I hope so!
May 16th, 2005 at 12:21 pm
I know I have said this before, but you are a great storyteller!!!!
Your mom is trying to get hold of you as she will be in Seattle for about 12 hours next Wednesday.
Love to you and Prairie, and thanks for the Kulis posting.
Dad
May 16th, 2005 at 1:27 pm
Get renters insurance.
Need I remind you of some mutual friends of our in Anchorage who lost all their belongins in an apratment fire?
May 16th, 2005 at 6:11 pm
Oh, believe me, that’s run through my mind on more than one occasion. I’d be in a world of hurt if something happened — I’ve got a fair amount of stuff to lose.
At the moment, though, saving as much as possible for the upcoming move is a big priority, so — knocking on wood again, here — I’ll just continue as-is for now. Once we’re in the new place, though, it’ll definitely be on the “to do” list.