BH

Brian Henderson

24/10/2007 10:05 PM

Sometimes you just get lucky

Apparently, this morning one of the sprinklers in the front yard
catastrophically exploded, sending a torrent of water at just the
right angle to flood my shop. When I walked in this afternoon, the
floor was damp (at least the standing water went down the drain) but
it doesn't look like anything else was hit.

Luckily, the project I'm about to finish, a nice custom bookcase for
my oldest daughter, survived because I put it up on sawhorses to work
on it last night. Had I waited until today like I was thinking of
doing, it would have been toast.

I guess fate smiles on you every now and then. :)


This topic has 15 replies

RC

Robatoy

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

24/10/2007 6:10 PM


>
> I guess fate smiles on you every now and then. :)

No kidding.

I bought a small house on Copeland Rd in Sarnia, Ontario back in the
mid-80's.
It had a fabulous 3 car garage and therin was the attraction.
A cheap enough piece of property that I bought it with a personal
cheque.
I built some challenging projects there.

One day, a house adjoining my back-yard, (on Rayburne Street) back-to-
back, exploded.
The explosion was caused by a gas leak finding a pilot light. A new
building was being constructed next door and the excavator ripped the
gas line out from the side of the house.
The occupants of the exploded house NEVER left that house, except THAT
weekend, because their daughter could not make the trip to see her
parents because she was expecting a baby. Her mom and dad decided to
go and surprise her instead. It was the FIRST time in THREE years they
left that house.
That total 'flukishness' reaffirmed my faith in my God in a BIG way.
This God that *I* know has a BIG finger and stirs it in so many lives.
I am NOT a religious freak, but I bow my head often.

r

LH

"Lew Hodgett"

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

24/10/2007 3:26 PM


"Brian Henderson" wrote:

> Apparently, this morning one of the sprinklers in the front yard
> catastrophically exploded, sending a torrent of water at just the
> right angle to flood my shop. When I walked in this afternoon, the
> floor was damp (at least the standing water went down the drain) but
> it doesn't look like anything else was hit.
>
> Luckily, the project I'm about to finish, a nice custom bookcase for
> my oldest daughter, survived because I put it up on sawhorses to
work
> on it last night. Had I waited until today like I was thinking of
> doing, it would have been toast.
>
> I guess fate smiles on you every now and then. :)

Better lucky than good any day.

Speaking of lawn sprinklers, it was reported that the lawn sprinklers
came on this morning at a home that had burned to the ground last
night here in SoCal.

lew

LH

"Lew Hodgett"

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 10:23 AM


"B A R R Y" wrote::

> We don't usually have sprinkers in my area, as we don't need them
and
> the pipes freeze if not totally empty in the winter.

Don't they play golf in your area?

Can't imagine a decent golf course without watered fairways and
greens.

Lew

BH

Brian Henderson

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 6:09 PM

On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 22:26:16 GMT, "Toller" <[email protected]> wrote:

>About 20 years ago I looked out the back window and something was different,
>but I couldn't put my finger on just what it was. I went out to find that a
>4' diameter willow had broken in the night and fallen in my yard. You can
>imagine what a huge crown a tree like that would have. It crushed one
>inexpensive chair, but didn't hit anything else. I would have said that
>would be impossible to find a way to put a tree that size in my yard without
>doing much damage, but it happened by chance. Go figure.

I've got a massive tree in my back yard and maybe 5-6 years ago during
a wind storm, a 30 foot branch came down. It didn't hit anything but
it ended up about a foot from the wall that my wife and I were
sleeping behind at the time. Another couple feet and we would have
had a tree on our bed.

Mt

"Max"

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

24/10/2007 6:43 PM


"Brian Henderson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Apparently, this morning one of the sprinklers in the front yard
> catastrophically exploded, sending a torrent of water at just the
> right angle to flood my shop. When I walked in this afternoon, the
> floor was damp (at least the standing water went down the drain) but
> it doesn't look like anything else was hit.
>
> Luckily, the project I'm about to finish, a nice custom bookcase for
> my oldest daughter, survived because I put it up on sawhorses to work
> on it last night. Had I waited until today like I was thinking of
> doing, it would have been toast.
>
> I guess fate smiles on you every now and then. :)

What was "fate" doing when the sprinkler exploded? <G>

Max

TT

"Toller"

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

24/10/2007 10:26 PM


"Brian Henderson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Apparently, this morning one of the sprinklers in the front yard
> catastrophically exploded, sending a torrent of water at just the
> right angle to flood my shop. When I walked in this afternoon, the
> floor was damp (at least the standing water went down the drain) but
> it doesn't look like anything else was hit.
>
> Luckily, the project I'm about to finish, a nice custom bookcase for
> my oldest daughter, survived because I put it up on sawhorses to work
> on it last night. Had I waited until today like I was thinking of
> doing, it would have been toast.
>
> I guess fate smiles on you every now and then. :)

About 20 years ago I looked out the back window and something was different,
but I couldn't put my finger on just what it was. I went out to find that a
4' diameter willow had broken in the night and fallen in my yard. You can
imagine what a huge crown a tree like that would have. It crushed one
inexpensive chair, but didn't hit anything else. I would have said that
would be impossible to find a way to put a tree that size in my yard without
doing much damage, but it happened by chance. Go figure.

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 5:51 PM

Lew Hodgett wrote:
>
> Don't they play golf in your area?
>
> Can't imagine a decent golf course without watered fairways and
> greens.
>

They blow 'em out with compressed air.

dn

dpb

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

24/10/2007 7:51 PM

B A R R Y wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 15:26:58 -0700, "Lew Hodgett"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>> Speaking of lawn sprinklers, it was reported that the lawn sprinklers
>> came on this morning at a home that had burned to the ground last
>> night here in SoCal.
>
> If the house is gone, where is the sprinkler controller?
>

Somewhere else, obviously...

--

JC

"J. Clarke"

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 7:58 AM

B A R R Y wrote:
> dpb wrote:
>> B A R R Y wrote:
>>> On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 15:26:58 -0700, "Lew Hodgett"
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> Speaking of lawn sprinklers, it was reported that the lawn
>>>> sprinklers came on this morning at a home that had burned to the
>>>> ground last night here in SoCal.
>>>
>>> If the house is gone, where is the sprinkler controller?
>>>
>>
>> Somewhere else, obviously...
>>
>> --
>
> Wow, you really are a top notch engineer! MIT educated? <G>
>
> We don't usually have sprinkers in my area, as we don't need them
> and
> the pipes freeze if not totally empty in the winter. My only
> experience is with my mom and dad's homes in FL. Their sprinklers
> are controlled by electric devices in the garage.
>
> Where else could a controller be if not in the burnt to the ground
> house?
>
> I was actually asking what I thought was a valid question from
> non-sprinkler land.

Maybe outside the house attached to a water pipe?

And "burnt to the ground" is generally figurative language. If all
the wood in my house burned to vapor there would still be concrete
remains extending several feet above the ground, and water pipes
filled with water take a great deal more burning than does wood, so
unless falling timber broke one they would likely still be standing,
furthermore the parts of the service entrance for power that are above
ground are metal sheathed so that wiring mught also survive. If I had
indoor sprinkler controllers they would likely be right next to the
breaker panel in the cellar.

--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

dn

dpb

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 7:51 AM

B A R R Y wrote:
> J. Clarke wrote:
>> If I had indoor sprinkler controllers they would likely be right next
>> to the breaker panel in the cellar.
>
> But would it have A/C power? If the home was destroyed would the
> breakers trip? <G>
>
> Homes in sprinker-land are often built on slabs, unlike our New England
> homes. I'm just curious how these things work.

In those million-dollar babies I've seen several pictures on the TV news
of houses that burned but some of the outbuildings weren't touched and
vice versa.

Many systems have battery backup on the timers so they don't lose the
timer settings during an outage.

Don't suspect there's anything very exotic going on...

--

JC

"J. Clarke"

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 10:48 AM

B A R R Y wrote:
> J. Clarke wrote:
>> If I had
>> indoor sprinkler controllers they would likely be right next to the
>> breaker panel in the cellar.
>
> But would it have A/C power? If the home was destroyed would the
> breakers trip? <G>

Only if something shorted the wiring. Then it would be the branch
circuits, not the main breaker. If the sprinkler controller was right
next to the breaker panel it might very well be on a circuit that ran
only in the cellar.

> Homes in sprinker-land are often built on slabs, unlike our New
> England homes. I'm just curious how these things work.

--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 7:15 AM

dpb wrote:
> B A R R Y wrote:
>> On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 15:26:58 -0700, "Lew Hodgett"
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Speaking of lawn sprinklers, it was reported that the lawn sprinklers
>>> came on this morning at a home that had burned to the ground last
>>> night here in SoCal.
>>
>> If the house is gone, where is the sprinkler controller?
>>
>
> Somewhere else, obviously...
>
> --

Wow, you really are a top notch engineer! MIT educated? <G>

We don't usually have sprinkers in my area, as we don't need them and
the pipes freeze if not totally empty in the winter. My only experience
is with my mom and dad's homes in FL. Their sprinklers are controlled
by electric devices in the garage.

Where else could a controller be if not in the burnt to the ground house?

I was actually asking what I thought was a valid question from
non-sprinkler land.

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

24/10/2007 7:09 PM

On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 15:26:58 -0700, "Lew Hodgett"
<[email protected]> wrote:


>Speaking of lawn sprinklers, it was reported that the lawn sprinklers
>came on this morning at a home that had burned to the ground last
>night here in SoCal.

If the house is gone, where is the sprinkler controller?

---------------------------------------------
** http://www.bburke.com/woodworking.html **
---------------------------------------------

md

mac davis

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

26/10/2007 8:48 AM

On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 10:23:52 -0700, "Lew Hodgett" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>"B A R R Y" wrote::
>
>> We don't usually have sprinkers in my area, as we don't need them
>and
>> the pipes freeze if not totally empty in the winter.
>
>Don't they play golf in your area?
>
>Can't imagine a decent golf course without watered fairways and
>greens.
>
>Lew
>
We have one here in Baja (unfortunately) and it's some kind of drought loving
moss or something like that.. gets it's water from the humidity and a bit of
spraying in the winter..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Brian Henderson on 24/10/2007 10:05 PM

25/10/2007 8:27 AM

J. Clarke wrote:
> If I had
> indoor sprinkler controllers they would likely be right next to the
> breaker panel in the cellar.

But would it have A/C power? If the home was destroyed would the
breakers trip? <G>

Homes in sprinker-land are often built on slabs, unlike our New England
homes. I'm just curious how these things work.


You’ve reached the end of replies