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Cake day: March 3rd, 2024

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  • I can’t speak for the person you replied to’s experience, but in mine it’s usually either a car hit a powerline pole or a storm knocked a tree/branch into some lines and cut it. While I’m sure it’s technically possible to make powerlines that can survive tornadoes, that’s not practical.

    In the case of a car causing it, it’s rarely down for more than an hour. Usually less. Storms can be anywhere for a few minutes to hours depending on how bad it is/how big the effected area is. If I had to guess, I lose power for >30min probably twice a year. Mostly depends on how bad tornado season is.

    Worst I’ve personally experienced was ~12 hours after a really bad storm knocked out power to a really, really big area. We got unlucky and were towards the end of the repair cycle.

    Then you have Texas, who run their own grid separate from the national grid. It fails when it gets too cold. Not too much of an issue, it’s Texas, doesn’t get that cold too often. Problem is it also fails when it gets too hot. That’s very much an issue, it’s Texas, it gets hot real often.