Forums The Vibe Chat Didders cru – show some respek

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  • #1055452
    Dan Ooops
    Participant

      So, at 2pm today Didcot power station A will cease production. At the end of the month the plant will close…..and over the next few years the site will be levelled.

      It will be a shame to see it go (it’s been there as long as I can remember) but what a venue!! Who’s got the balls then???

      #1269941
      General Lighting
      Moderator

        @Dan Ooops! 535428 wrote:

        So, at 2pm today Didcot power station A will cease production. At the end of the month the plant will close…..and over the next few years the site will be levelled.

        It will be a shame to see it go (it’s been there as long as I can remember) but what a venue!! Who’s got the balls then???

        If its anything like the closure of previous power stations anyone putting on a event on the site there (legal or otherwise) will have to keep a very sharp lookout for misguided trippers trying to scale a 132 000 V grid pylon or get into the SSE to National Grid substation, as usually when a power station is levelled the substation is left there (or it would break the ring/backup high voltage feeds used for resilience). A few years ago this poor lad who had presumably taken a snide pill or done too much wandered out of a club in Norwich and walked 2 miles where he climbed straight into the Trowse substation.

        1391737_cb7f1ed5.jpg

        even the smaller bit is bare open wires energised to 33 000 V …

        EDF (now UK power networks) engineers found his body a few days later when they went to investigate a circuit breaker having auto tripped and re-energised.

        no one is 100% sure why the lad decided to go there as there was no evidence he wanted to harm himself, but when you might have this sort of kit within walking distance of the rave the risks must be far greater…

        #1269946
        MC G-Tek
        Participant

          @General Lighting 535430 wrote:

          If its anything like the closure of previous power stations anyone putting on a event on the site there (legal or otherwise) will have to keep a very sharp lookout for misguided trippers trying to scale a 132 000 V grid pylon or get into the SSE to National Grid substation, as usually when a power station is levelled the substation is left there (or it would break the ring/backup high voltage feeds used for resilience). A few years ago this poor lad who had presumably taken a snide pill or done too much wandered out of a club in Norwich and walked 2 miles where he climbed straight into the Trowse substation.

          1391737_cb7f1ed5.jpg

          even the smaller bit is bare open wires energised to 33 000 V …

          EDF (now UK power networks) engineers found his body a few days later when they went to investigate a circuit breaker having auto tripped and re-energised.

          no one is 100% sure why the lad decided to go there as there was no evidence he wanted to harm himself, but when you might have this sort of kit within walking distance of the rave the risks must be far greater…

          I guess that as long as you can cover the costs, you can ensure that all the important / dangerous areas are manned by security in order to prevent any potential tragedy occurring. Would be a sick place to have a party though!

          #1269945
          Dan Ooops
          Participant

            Good point GL – you are always the voice of reason!!

            Of course, I would be inredibly careful if I were to be involved in any such gathering!!

            #1269942
            General Lighting
            Moderator

              Usually a substation enclosure is guarded by razor barbed wire etc, has the picture of the stick man being knocked flat by electric every 2 metres and is uninviting and scarey to the largest contingent of moosers.

              I still have a certain amount of “respectful fear” just for 230/400V infrastructure in plant rooms etc at work and that is all brand new insulated stuff and I know exactly what is dangerous and what is safe (ironically at our largest site in Suffolk SSE did the metering, I thought I recognised that sort of service fuse head :laugh_at:)

              One thing to watch for is those folk wanting easy cash thinking that there is valuable copper in there especially earthing cable and “its empty so no ones using it”.

              I am not going to pre-judge travellers/gypsies or foreigners as even the feds know that it is not just them who think this way, a white English lad round my way got sparked from 33 000 V trying to get metal from a disused factory. the saddest part of it was he was trying to get cash to buy some presents for his kid as he had become a dad recently but wasn’t able to get work.

              might even be worth looking at using the site legally if possible, the Dutch have a lot of events in a old factory what was once used by the electricity company to build and test transformers…

              #1269947
              MC G-Tek
              Participant

                If the site could be used legally, that would make for a far better event in terms of safety – and at a site such as that, safety needs to be a paramount concern. If it was an illegal party and anything happened to one of the partygoers, the media would have a field day with it.

                Sad news about the lad who got sparked round GL’s way, the circumstances in which it happened only make it worse too.

                #1269944
                thelog
                Participant

                  Yeah be careful with a place like that, but if it’s closed down would any power still be conveyed into or from it? Down brighton we used to have parties at shoreham power station, although it wasn’t a real power station nor was it actually inside a power station, nor was it atucally on the power station grounds we still called it the powerstation party.

                  There were two big chimneys that burn coal but the knocked one down in the late 80’s that we watched from the sussex downs, controlled demolition style. The second one was eventually demolished in 2000.

                  Now stands a big metal grey gas power station.

                  then
                  [ATTACH=CONFIG]84106[/ATTACH]

                  and now

                  [ATTACH=CONFIG]84107[/ATTACH]

                  [ATTACH=CONFIG]84108[/ATTACH]

                  #1269943
                  General Lighting
                  Moderator

                    @thelog 535451 wrote:

                    Yeah be careful with a place like that, but if it’s closed down would any power still be conveyed into or from it?

                    yes, as the high voltage cables are arranged in a loop between each substation with various switching equipment so that if one power station is closed down or goes off supply power can be brought in from elsewhere on the national grid, which is how they can afford to shut the station in the first place. if they did not do this the towns and villages around it would go dark. it would be possible to remove the substation without shutting down the leccy for a large area!

                    this is what they have near me. The power station itself was decommissioned in the 1980s. If you zoom in you can get an idea of how big the site is, as nearby are full size lorries which can carry a entire isotainer.

                    Cliff Quay Sub-Station Ipswich

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                  Forums The Vibe Chat Didders cru – show some respek