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Woah!
I just got a 1 MB PDF file. Opening it makes my poor little 1.5 GHz
Athlon cry. Printing it resulted in a dense tangle of lines that was
beyong legibility. Checking the PDF properties, I see it's designed for...
...are you sitting down?...
A0 paper.
As in, the largest standardised paper size that exists, at more than a
meter wide. (2.5 feet by 4 feet, roughly.)
The writing was hopelessly small. (If you ask Word to print some 2 pt
text on an A4 sheet, that's roughly how big. Although I notice it's a
particularly bland sans serif typeface that only appears to contain
uppercase.)
Interestingly, I asked the computer to print it again at A3 size (we
have *one* printer that can do this), and the lines all stayed the same
thickness; they're just further apart now. It's still extremely cramped,
but it's vaguely readable. (I notice fairly extreme aliasing due to the
fact that all the lines are very slightly off axis.)
This plan contains an entire zoo of curios symbols - but unlike the
previous plan, there's a key explaining what they all are:
(Semicircle with line)
FLUSH SINGLE 13A SWITCHED SOCKET OUTLET
(Filled semicircle with line)
FLUSH TWIN 13A SWITCHED SOCKET OUTLET
(Half-filled semicircle with line)
13 SWITCHED FUSED CONNECTION UNIT
(Half-filled semicircle with line inside dashed box with "FCU")
13A SWITCHED FUSED CONNECTION UNIT AT HIGH LEVEL ABOVE CEILING FOR
FAN COIL UNIT
(Half-filled semicircle with line inside dashed box with "HVA")
13A SWITCHED FUSED CONNECTION UNIT AT HIGH LEVEL ABOVE CEILING FOR
HVAC CONTROLS
(Semicircle with cross)
16A SPN+E SINGLE PHASE NEUTRAL & EARTH INDUSTRIAL UNSWITCHED SOCKET
OUTLET MK COMMANDO OR EQUAL & APPROVED
(Box with "R")
SP&N ISOLATOR - R DENOTED RATING OF DEVICE
(Half-filled box with "R")
TP&N ISOLATOR - R DENOTES RATING OF DEVICE
(Box with "PP")
POWER POLE C/W 4XSINGLE 13A SWITCHED SOCKET OUTLETS AND 4XRJ45 DATA
OUTLETS
(Dashed line)
3 COMPARTMENT DADO TRUNKING INSTALLED BELOW WINDOW CILL
(Box with "FB")
3 COMPARTMENT FLOOR BOX C/E 2xTWIN 13A SWITCHED OUTLETS & 4xRF45 DATA
OUTLETS. 3 METRE UNFUSED 32A TAP OFF UNITS & FLEXIBLE CONNECTION
(Unequal-dashed line with crossed box)
63A UNDERFLOOR BUSBAR WITH END FEED UNIT
(Rectangle with diagnol hatching)
200mm BASKET TRAY - ABOV CEIL[cut off printout]
(Rectangle with dots)
200mm BASKET TRAY - IN FLOOR VO[cut off printout]
(Filled triangle)
RJ45 OUTLET WIRED BACK TO PATCH PANEL IN COMMS ROOM TESTED AND LABELLED
(Filled square with white triangle)
ENTRANCE INTERCOM AND DOOR RELEASE
This entire text takes up less than 3 inches of paper.
(Woah - 63A? o_O Anybody know what thickness of copper it takes to
handle that kind of currentl? That's gotta be more like a girder than a
wire!)
Inspecting the plan itself, I see an underfloor tray leading from that
curiosly non-square "riser cupboard" to all of the ofice spaces and my
server room. I then see an above-ceiling tray running from the server
room to all the lab spaces.
The office spaces are liberally littered with floor boxes, the lab
office has floor boxes and a generous sprinskling of wall-mounted power
and data sockets, and the lab is positively *encrusted* with power and
data sockets on every available vertical surface. (Even the support
girders holding the roof up!)
Checking the other data on the plan, I find this:
TITLE
Ground Floor Office B
Small Power & Ancillery Services
DRAWN BY
KB
APPROVED
RB
DATE DRAWN
27-09-07
SCALE
1/50 @ A0
DRAWING NUMBER
1001/E003 B
(All of which is really *extremely* hard to read. The typeface is fairly
big, but seems to be boldface or something. Almost no whitespace inside
letters like "O"...)
Nice of them to include the paper size this time! (It makes a bit of a
difference.) So, printed at A3, this should be... hmm... 1:400. Ouch!
So, given that it's 1:400, that means we've got power and data sockets
every... uh... 2 meters, roughly. On almost every internal wall in the
lab. And floor boxes every 4 meters everywhere else. Wow.
Oh look, there's a box on the back wall marked
GENERATOR INPUT SOCKET
Since we store stuff that has to be kept frozen, a power cut is a fairly
major event. Our customers won't be too pleased if their $80 million
project has to be restarted from scratch because the stuff melted! So in
the event of a power cut, a big truck comes along and dumps a huge lump
of pig iron labelled "CAT POWER" outside our building, with a
ridiculously huge cable and a comically over-sized plug on the end.
(Seriously, the cable is thicker than some tree trunks!)
There's A LOT of over-printed text, but it seems that the individual
sockets don't have unique numbers. ;-)
It's really quite confusing trying to reed this plan - the trunking
stands out much more than the actual walls. I keep thinking the wire
trays are the walls, and the walls are wire trays! LOL.
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> (Woah - 63A? o_O Anybody know what thickness of copper it takes to handle
> that kind of currentl? That's gotta be more like a girder than a wire!)
Roughly double your standard 13A cable would do... Look at the cable going
to the starter motor on your car, that's usually 100A or so.
> It's really quite confusing trying to reed this plan - the trunking stands
> out much more than the actual walls. I keep thinking the wire trays are
> the walls, and the walls are wire trays! LOL.
Can't you print it out tiled, ie 8 A3 sheets (or however many it is) then
just put them together?
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scott wrote:
>> (Woah - 63A? o_O Anybody know what thickness of copper it takes to
>> handle that kind of currentl? That's gotta be more like a girder than
>> a wire!)
>
> Roughly double your standard 13A cable would do... Look at the cable
> going to the starter motor on your car, that's usually 100A or so.
1. A car runs on 12V electrics, not 250V. Does that make a difference?
2. Is maximum load proportional to diameter or cross section area? (The
latter is quadratically propertional to diameter.)
> Can't you print it out tiled, ie 8 A3 sheets (or however many it is)
> then just put them together?
Well, in principle yes. In practice, I very much doubt you'd ever get
the pieces to line up properly. (Ever notice how map books *always* put
the place you want to look at in the crease?) Plus I'm having enough
trouble finding somewhere to put an A3 printout without it getting
crinkled up... :-S
Apparently the planners have access to an A0 printer. I don't even want
to imagine what that must cost... ;-)
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Invisible wrote:
> scott wrote:
>>> (Woah - 63A? o_O Anybody know what thickness of copper it takes to
>>> handle that kind of currentl? That's gotta be more like a girder than
>>> a wire!)
>>
>> Roughly double your standard 13A cable would do... Look at the cable
>> going to the starter motor on your car, that's usually 100A or so.
>
> 1. A car runs on 12V electrics, not 250V. Does that make a difference?
>
> 2. Is maximum load proportional to diameter or cross section area? (The
> latter is quadratically propertional to diameter.)
Hmmm... Here's some info:
http://www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm
http://www.epanorama.net/documents/wiring/wire_resistance.html
According to the one site, 6 AWG wire would be enough. Next size up if
over 100 ft. :)
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Invisible wrote:
> scott wrote:
>>> (Woah - 63A? o_O Anybody know what thickness of copper it takes to
>>> handle that kind of currentl? That's gotta be more like a girder than
>>> a wire!)
>>
>> Roughly double your standard 13A cable would do... Look at the cable
>> going to the starter motor on your car, that's usually 100A or so.
>
> 1. A car runs on 12V electrics, not 250V. Does that make a difference?
>
> 2. Is maximum load proportional to diameter or cross section area? (The
> latter is quadratically propertional to diameter.)
>
>> Can't you print it out tiled, ie 8 A3 sheets (or however many it is)
>> then just put them together?
>
> Well, in principle yes. In practice, I very much doubt you'd ever get
> the pieces to line up properly. (Ever notice how map books *always* put
> the place you want to look at in the crease?) Plus I'm having enough
> trouble finding somewhere to put an A3 printout without it getting
> crinkled up... :-S
>
> Apparently the planners have access to an A0 printer. I don't even want
> to imagine what that must cost... ;-)
They are not too bad - at least the cheaper ones. We have a 'plotter'
that prints 2'x3' pretty easily. The paper is on a roll that is 3' wide
and like 50' long.
If you need to get it printed look at local copy centers - they might be
able to help. Some engineering shops (that sell stuff) might be able to
help you out as well.
But then again, maybe you are expected to look at your tiny screen and
figure everything that you need in your head. After all, pencils cost
money as well..
Tom
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Mike Raiford wrote:
> Invisible wrote:
>> scott wrote:
>>>> (Woah - 63A? o_O Anybody know what thickness of copper it takes to
>>>> handle that kind of currentl? That's gotta be more like a girder
>>>> than a wire!)
>>>
>>> Roughly double your standard 13A cable would do... Look at the cable
>>> going to the starter motor on your car, that's usually 100A or so.
>>
>> 1. A car runs on 12V electrics, not 250V. Does that make a difference?
>>
>> 2. Is maximum load proportional to diameter or cross section area?
>> (The latter is quadratically propertional to diameter.)
>
> Hmmm... Here's some info:
>
> http://www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm
> http://www.epanorama.net/documents/wiring/wire_resistance.html
>
> According to the one site, 6 AWG wire would be enough. Next size up if
> over 100 ft. :)
I'd say 3 AWG - but either way, it's less than 1 cm thick.
Like I said, when they hook up the external generator, it comes with a
cable well over 10 cm thick (!)
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Tom Austin wrote:
> Invisible wrote:
>> Apparently the planners have access to an A0 printer. I don't even
>> want to imagine what that must cost... ;-)
>
>
> They are not too bad - at least the cheaper ones. We have a 'plotter'
> that prints 2'x3' pretty easily. The paper is on a roll that is 3' wide
> and like 50' long.
I used to own an old HP line plotter. (Do they still make those?) It
seems amazingly fast - until you actually try to plot anything of any
real complexity, and then suddenly it seems absurdly slow...
> If you need to get it printed look at local copy centers - they might be
> able to help. Some engineering shops (that sell stuff) might be able to
> help you out as well.
Nah. If I was that bothered, I'm sure the planners themselves can supply
a printout. (Indeed, it seems to be easy to get prints, and
near-impossible to get electronic copies...)
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Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
> I'd say 3 AWG - but either way, it's less than 1 cm thick.
>
> Like I said, when they hook up the external generator, it comes with a
> cable well over 10 cm thick (!)
A lot of that thickness will be insulation, shielding and armor.
Stephen
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Stephen wrote:
> Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
>> I'd say 3 AWG - but either way, it's less than 1 cm thick.
>>
>> Like I said, when they hook up the external generator, it comes with a
>> cable well over 10 cm thick (!)
>
> A lot of that thickness will be insulation, shielding and armor.
Probably.
The plug is physically larger than my head. The whole contraption looks
like a giant's plaything has fallen out of the sky or something...
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And lo on Fri, 09 Nov 2007 11:44:37 -0000, Invisible <voi### [at] devnull> did
spake, saying:
> Since we store stuff that has to be kept frozen, a power cut is a fairly
> major event. Our customers won't be too pleased if their $80 million
> project has to be restarted from scratch because the stuff melted! So in
> the event of a power cut, a big truck comes along and dumps a huge lump
> of pig iron labelled "CAT POWER" outside our building, with a
> ridiculously huge cable and a comically over-sized plug on the end.
> (Seriously, the cable is thicker than some tree trunks!)
And what happens if the firm can't get you a CAT out in time? If it's that
crucial shouldn't you at least have a CAT UPS or equivalent to tide you
over.
--
Phil Cook
--
I once tried to be apathetic, but I just couldn't be bothered
http://flipc.blogspot.com
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