Burning Down The House

in The Pub2 months ago

I'm laughing now, especially that I had a post not long ago about getting off on the wrong foot this year, detailing how many problems I had in January, but this is not a laughing matter, not by far.

Thinking back now, I think I can call myself lucky for getting out of trouble easily each time, but if I want to be honest, it's not luck. It's my ability to pay attention to the smallest details and to be vigilant all the time. Well, almost all the time :P

It's an ability that I developed early in life and most likely that's why my passion is trading and finance, areas where precision, balance and self control matters a lot.

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Photo by Joel Filipe on Unsplash

Sometimes I like to test people and ask them how many steps the stairs to their apartment have, to see if they know where they live or could find their way to the door with their eyes closed. They not only have no clue but are also looking at me like I have taken leave of my senses. It funny to see their faces, but sad in the same time, as not may are paying attention to small details. We tend to take everything for granted, then when shit hits the fan, we are not ready to cope.

I grew up in tough times and when I was a kid, we had programmed power shortages each day, from 6pm to 8pm. We were let go from school a little earlier, to make it out of school, before the electricity is gone, but the walk home took 15 - 20 minutes, so when we arrived home, we had to walk to the 4th floor in pitch black dark. We knew each step, each turn and in a sense it was a fun game, not to mention it helped me a lot to develop some skills.

My brother is an electrician and when he talks, I listen. Sometimes he's sharing stories from work and you have no idea how much you can learn, just by listening to what he says, that can come in handy one day.

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Photo by Joel Filipe on Unsplash

Once I was doing my washing and passing by the electrical outlet that the washing machine is usually connected to, I heard it was making a rustling sound and knew right away it's a huge problem because I heard my brother using this word once in a similar situation we witnessed together. (Crazy how my mind works. I can tell you where he said that and what the situation happened. When I told him, he was shocked as he could not remember any of it, but who can blame him as he's doing this every day.) Anyway, thanks to remembering that sound, I was able to disconnect the washing machine and avoid creating bigger problems.

But before I digress too much, let me tell you what's happened earlier this week. I dropped the ball and I'm not happy about it, not one bit! 😬

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Photo by Brendan Church on Unsplash

Not long ago I wrote an unboxing post about the air fryer I bought. Since then, I've tested it with several occasion and could not be happier with the results, but that's a topic for another day (not that I'm planning to write about it).

The power consumption of this kitchen toy is 1800W, which is considered not a lot I suppose, but that depends heavily on where you live. My apartment building was built in 1970 and back in those days the communist government's main goal was to keep people in dark, in every sense of the word. Long story short, the electrical network can't support much. To make things work, I have separate circuits for different kitchen appliances, for the air conditioning, but still, I need to monitor consumption to avoid overheating the network.

A couple of days ago, while the washing machine was on, someone else (it wasn't meeee), connected the air fryer and the two were working simultaneously for about 30 minutes. Being busy with other things, I only noticed the strange smell, that was like burnt oil. It was strange as the fryer doesn't use oil and it is washed after every use, but could not figure out where the smell came from. It was late afternoon, when I saw the marks high up on the wall. 😬

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Photo by Davi Rezende on Unsplash

I'm not a newbie in this filed, so knew right away, that seeing smoke like marks around that box (which is a connection point of several cables) is not a good sign, not by far. So I phoned my brother and he confirmed my suspicions. That's where the smell came from, thus the smoke and good thing it's a small fix as the wires are not burnt, but we'll see once he gets here and has a look. Fingers crossed. I'm not proud of myself for not paying attention, but it's too late for that.

I needed this like a hole in my head and it's frustrating to always watch consumption, but the other option is to rewire the whole flat. That's a work you do when you move in, not when you're already living there. It's a huge work, no matter how you look at it.

This shows how much life has evolved. We can't live without electricity and the demand is increasing day by day. Heating and cooking is made using gas, but the rest, starting from the baking oven, is running on electricity. Sometimes it feels like without electricity, life stops.

If I ever move to a new place, I'll make sure to have the whole place rewired and up to future standards. Right now I'm glad I didn't burn down the house, but this is no joke, I need to pay more attention.

If you're a newbie, you may want to check out these guides:


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love all pics
great shots

Yes, I agree. That's why I selected them.

that's weird, here we also have a limit of things working at the same time, but if you pass that threshold the electricity is turned off for you whole house until you turn something off so no damage can be really done, it's instant

you can have more but then you pay more taxes!

Yeah but that's a different thing. When I said too much consumption I was referring to consumption compared to what the circuit can handle. Here you can consume as much as you want, or what the system can handle. I have several circuits and have to consider how much I can plug into each. So far there have been no problems but the fryer is a new entry and I didn't pay attention 😬

Oh we have standard power output here, something that happened to you could never happen

It's good that you know the problem and understand the risks. I ignored all of this, and in 1994, our house burned down completely on Saint Nicholas Day(...night).
You could say that we weren't careful, and we were punished! Or maybe it saved us, because it happened at night and we weren't home.
It was also caused by the old electrical system and an electric heater left plugged in...
Like you, I also need to change the electrical system in my current house, but it's hard to get started.
Until we change something... keep an eye on the outlets!

Holy heaven, that's heavy and really sad. I'm so sorry you had to go through such a dramatic experience and lose everything.

Yes, we have to be vigilant and careful as this is not something you can take lightly.

Thank you for your empathy. Many years have passed since then.
I got through this event because I had support
and help from friends first and foremost.

My maternal grandmother only knew how to change a plug... my brother, who is younger than me, learned that from her, and then from the electricians who came to our house... I learned from my brother. Fire and electricity scare me, but my brother and I changed all the electrical and water installations in our house in Argentina, so now I know what everything is, and I feel much safer knowing a little bit about everything.

The cables have done what is called... mass... as if they melted... I hope the translator understands what I want to write haha and you realized it just in time.

I'm guessing the outlet wasn't grounded either? Or was it? We used to have an old airfryer that just had a two prong ungrounded plug and when we upgraded to our new one we couldn't believe how much cooler the cord is now that it is grounded.

Every outlet has to be grounded as otherwise the project can't get approval. You can't sell the building otherwise.

Interesting. That's the way it is here now, but a lot of houses from the 1970's either don't have grounds or they fake grounded them.

That is shocking honestly as this is not a matter to of gambling. Here every outlet, every build has to have electricity by the book and they are checking it.

I didn't want to shock anyone so I didn't post the photo, but this is what's happened

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It's an easy fix, hopefully my brother has some free time this week, to fix it.

I wish that things were a bit more strict here. I think with new construction it definitely is, but anything older, you never know what you are going to get. I saw a home improvement guy from Canada once and he said he would never do a renovation in the US because things weren't as locked down and there were so many unknowns once you get into things. I think a lot of older houses in the US have three prong outlets, but they aren't really tied back to a common ground for the house.

That is shocking and honestly I don't understand how it is allowed, especially in the US where most of the houses are made of wood or who knows what, compared to brick and concrete here. Electricity has to be done at the highest standards as it's the most dangerous along with gas.

I can understand the Canadian as costs can easily double if you don't know what you're dealing with and your profit becomes history.

Yeah, it's pretty crazy. We never know what we are going to get when we open up an outlet for what should be an easy replacement.

Sometimes it feels like without electricity, life stops

We don't have programmed outages here, but we have periodic loss of power that can last for a week or more. During the last big storm, in 2012, we lost power for 13 days. Then I was relatively young--65--and handled the inconvenience OK. Hard, though because we had freezing snow during the outage and things got quite cold.

Recently I've decided it would be much harder to sit out a loss now. At considerable expense I've bought two portable charging batteries and a solar charging panel. I figure at least the refrigerator, an electric blanket and small appliance can be charged.

Doesn't sound like much, but as you say, it seems life does stop without electricity.

that seeing smoke like marks around that box (which is a connection point of several cables) is not a good sign

For sure!!! You are lucky the house didn't burn down. Do you have circuit breakers? These are supposed to 'flip' (turn off) when there is an overload, I believe.

We don't have programmed outages here

We don't have those either. Neither periodic loss of power. Sometimes it happens to lose power because something gets faulty or some worker mistakenly hit the cable, but it's extremely rare. I can say we have power 24/7.

Do you have circuit breakers?

Of course, several. I have a set in the apartment, then there's a set on each floor and there's the main one, for the whole building. But luckily the problem was not as big to be affected.

It sucks to be in your situation, especially during winter but these days there's always a solution, if you can afford it.

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