You must not have an even number of HE-capable nodes. What you're running into 
is a classic split-brain scenario, with only two nodes allowed to run the HE, 
and one of the nodes down, the surviving host does not have quorum so does not 
know it can safely power off the other machine (because obviously this 
surviving node, from its viewpoint, may have somehow become isolated from the 
network while the other host is happily alive and running the engine and 
controlling everything).

In clustering, you _never_ want two, or four, or six of something. One, three, 
five, etc... because it must be impossible to have a "tie" situation when the 
decisions are being made on which hosts are needing to be fenced.
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