..... A break from this stupid winter with avg. 4c weather this week
here.
It can take all the snow along with it...
It can take all the snow along with it...
Hello Atreyu,
13 Feb 26 15:36, you wrote to All:
It can take all the snow along with it...
And the 0F (-17C) weather too!
Ray Quinn wrote to Sean Dennis <=-
Visalia hasn't seen snow since 01/25/1999 - a total of 6 inches (15.25 cm). Shut down the whole town for a few hours with wrecks all over and
was melted by mid-afternoon.
I just left Soda Springs, CA ahead of a storm expected to drop 6-9
feet of snow over the next few days. Some people were heading into
town FOR THE SNOW...
I hope they stocked up on firewood, lanterns and have propane heat -
our cabin is all electric. :(
I'm back at home on the coast, we're getting hammered with rain. We
have power issues as my street is fed by a wire that cuts across a
ravine and is susceptible to falling trees. If the power goes out, I
have a LexusWall(tm) - plug an AC inverter into my Lexus hybrid, run
an extension cord to my refrigerator. I have a gas tankless heater
which needs a little power for the electronics, I can plug it in and
take hot showers, albeit in the dark.
Ray Quinn wrote to Kurt Weiske <=-
I used to travel I-80 through Donner Pass back in the 1990's in an 18-wheeler. We weren't allowed to use tire chains, as per company
policy, so I spent some time either in the Reno/Sparks area or
Sacramento waiting for the snow to stop. I remember once we stopped at
the rest area at the summit and there was at least 12-15 feet of snow -
it towered over the building.
I have heard of people using their car to power their home in
emergencies like you describe. You want to keep your food from
spoiling. Especially as expensive as food is these days. We haven't had power issues but once or twice in the nearly ten years we've lived in
our current location. Our power comes from the overhead lines that runs between the homes, but SCE is running power lines underground in some
of the neighboring streets. Our house was built in 1960 and was in a County island until about 10-15 years ago, and until last Friday (2/23/2026) was not on city sewer. (Boy is that expensive!)
If power does go out for an extended perior, we have a built-in propane powered 2500 watt generator in our travel trailer with another
gas-powered portable generator. I could install something to connect
the generator to the house, not to power the house, per se, but to work
in conjunction with the solar panels on the roof, so long as the sun is shining. The solar system won't generate power unless it detects power.
A safety net so workers don't get electrocuted due to power feeding
back through the lines. And we don't yet have a battery, but have
looked into it.
In the few days after the septic tank was pumped and the sewer
connected, we used the trailer for the toilet as well as showers so it wouldn't have to be pumped again.
Stay safe and, if possible, stay dry.
73 de Ray
Visalia, CA DM06ii
W6RAY | WRKZ506
... A Smith and Wesson beats four aces.
--- GoldED+/W64-MSVC 1.1.5-b20250409
* Origin: "Ray's Road Node | Somewhere in California! "! (1:214/23)
Ray Quinn wrote to Kurt Weiske <=-
I used to travel I-80 through Donner Pass back in the 1990's in
an 18-wheeler. We weren't allowed to use tire chains, as per
company policy, so I spent some time either in the Reno/Sparks
area or Sacramento waiting for the snow to stop. I remember once
we stopped at the rest area at the summit and there was at least
12-15 feet of snow - it towered over the building.
That's pretty frightening, no chains in a storm with a load?
The snow's been so high at that rest stop that people go sledding up
in the hills behind it!
I have heard of people using their car to power their home in
emergencies like you describe. You want to keep your food from
spoiling. Especially as expensive as food is these days. We
haven't had power issues but once or twice in the nearly ten
years we've lived in our current location. Our power comes from
the overhead lines that runs between the homes, but SCE is
running power lines underground in some of the neighboring
streets. Our house was built in 1960 and was in a County island
until about 10-15 years ago, and until last Friday (2/23/2026)
was not on city sewer. (Boy is that expensive!)
The nice thing about a hybrid is that the hybrid battery keeps the
12v battery charged. When the charge runs down on the hybrid battery,
the engine kicks over by itself - usually for a couple of minutes
every half-hour or so. I went 3 days and used less than a quarter of a tank of gas.
Not bad at all.
As always, Kurt, it is good to chat with you. I just realized (I should kno better by now) what echo we are in. Perhaps a bit off-topic here.
On 17 Feb 26 08:39:22, Ray Quinn said the following to Kurt Weiske:
Not bad at all.
As always, Kurt, it is good to chat with you. I just realized (I
should kno better by now) what echo we are in. Perhaps a bit
off-topic here.
Really "nothing" is off-topic here :)
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