Your best bet is still to stay put and call 911. They will contact the power company.
With any down lines remember you cannot rely on SIGHT, SOUND, SMELL, or TOUCH to tell you if a line is powered.
Your best bet is still to stay put and call 911. They will contact the power company.
With any down lines remember you cannot rely on SIGHT, SOUND, SMELL, or TOUCH to tell you if a line is powered.
Thanks for the support from others in this thread. I was somewhat flippant in my response but I wanted to get the attention of the non-technical people.
The op stated that he wasn’t sure why the power line conductors were not (sheathed) insulated and my response was meant to show that the location and connection of the power lines were made in such a way as to use air to accomplish the same purpose.
I admitted my aversion to the usage was a nitpick and my goal wasn’t to convert the world to technical jargon users but to explain how the system worked.
I’m OK if you want to go on calling it non-insulated as long as you understand the mechanism which is used to keep it from causing harm.
After all, I’m pretty sure that I bug the hell out of zoologists when I say, “But if I call it a buffalo and you STILL understand that I’m referring to a bison, what’s the difference?”
Also the high voltage would degrade the insulation rather quickly and the wires would have to be replaced
FWIW, “TASTE” is not included because, you know, how else do you check out a 9V battery?
During the last ice storm we had here, maybe six years ago, I walked to class (which good lord should have been cancelled) past a downed power line that was, no kidding, writhing and sparking on the ground. Somebody had helpfully put two orange cones by it.
The wires don’t even have to come down to cause a fire. Video of a tree being blown into live wires and being set on fire.