On 12/26/19 11:18 AM, Stephen Satchell wrote:
On 12/26/19 10:55 AM, Michael Thomas wrote:
Here in California, you're going to need a lot more than 8 hours. We
had one that lasted 3 days, followed by about 8 hours of power,
followed by 2 days of no power. If this is the new normal, and I'm
afraid that it is, that's probably going to require some pretty hefty
backup. Not to mention expensive.
The one "good" thing that PG&E did is expose all of these
vulnerabilities. Every neighborhood probably knows whether their
carrier is naughty or nice now.
Here in Nevada, specifically at Lake Tahoe, power is less reliable
because of heavy snow and sliding trucks (the power equivalent to a
backhoe disconnect). One of the cell sites is on the top level of a
casino parking garage. I found out about this when the casino went
bankrupt, the parking garage was blocked off, and I joined the
security guard crew to protect the on-site gaming equipment. Months
into the project, the cell company in question begged the bankruptcy
court for access -- to replace the empty propane cylinders in their
shack. That's right, no mains tap at all. When the casino lost power
because of bill non-payment, the cell site stayed up.
A network operator will need to look at the total cost, including
labor, of backing up mains power. versus using local genertion
exclusively -- or using mains power as the backup! Factor in any
upcoming fines for service outage, re 911. (Try to avoid piped
natural gas as the fuel for onsite generation.)
Longer term, review your backhauls and interconnects. Dark fiber
would be preferred here, because you would be controlling backup power
at both ends, and not depending on intermediate nodes.
One of the interesting things I found out is that POTS termination out
in the field can be powered by some of the pairs back to the CO they are
making redundant. It's enough power that running the DSLAM isn't a
problem either. I'm not sure that that could translate for anything
else, but there is probably a lot of copper sitting idle these days.
Mike