Xerox engineer came by to work on Xerox printer. On the way out, instead of
pressing the double door breaker bar on the first set of doors he presses
the RED power-off button. Down 8 hours. Plastic covers on them the next
week. Engineer is still at Xerox, office job.

Further down the road, a RED button was installed on the second set of
double doors that actually exit out the building. Delivery person knows to
press the RED button to open the EXIT doors. Once inside the computer room
though there are the other set of double doors, they also have a RED button.
Delivery person knows that RED button equals open. Presses it and down we
go. 4 hours to recover.

Now actual exit button is BLACK and RED button plastic covers are now locked
with YELLOW caution tape over them. 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Pommier, Rex R. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, June 24, 2005 3:33 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: HALON et al

 

Not a big red button, but close.  IBM CE's just finished replacing an HDA in

IBM 3380 cabinet.  They were picking up the crashed HDA sitting on the floor

at the head of the string when one of the CE's loses his balance.  Hand

swings over his head and hits the disable switches on about 12 of the 16

disks in the string.  Within a week all switches in entire room have

Plexiglas over them.

 

-----Original Message-----

From: Duffy, Peter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Sent: Friday, June 24, 2005 2:44 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: Re: HALON et al

 

 

The one dump I was in was after a water alarm went off due to an A/C unit

drain clogging and a puddle finally triggering the alarm.

 

Operator ran to the panel, did not know what to do so they decided to do

SOMETHING, they pulled the manual release.  I was the second one out after I

got hit with liquid HALON.  Thick hair saved me from frostbite. One nozzle

broke off from the ceiling, dented a floor tile pretty well. I was the

second one out as I had an operator impaled on my right arm as I pushed

through the doors. 

 

We had training the next week on override procedures.  Press and hold, call

security, wait for instructions.  So I asked, "where's the phone?" Manager

looked at me like I was stupid and pointed to one wall.  So, I asked,

"where's the override?" and he angrily pointed at the button in front of

him.  On another wall, 20 feet away from the phone.  It dawned on him as

people started to laugh.  I never saw the telephone people install a new

phone so fast.  3rd shift was a one person show and the usual operator

thanked me as she laughed.

 

Next dump was on a Saturday at another site, I got paged, a water alarm,

manual release, yada yada yada.  Walked them through the power up over the

phone as I gasped between laughs as I drove over.

 

Any good Big Red Button stories?  Hehehehe  Seen my share of those.  Had a

customer VP say, "That button?  It's not hooked up to anything."  He pushed

it and 30 spacecraft engineers on high end UNIX boxes started screaming as

the room plunged into darkness.  All I had said was, "can we get facilities

to remove it when we have a scheduled building power outage?"  He said yes.

 

/ptd

 

-----Original Message-----

From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf

Of Leonard Woren

Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 12:04 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: Re: HALON et al

 

On Wed, Jun 22, 2005 at 01:55:23PM -0500, Ned Hedrick

([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:

> There is also a product called Inergen -- a mixture of 52% nitrogen,

40% 

> argon and 8% carbon dioxide -- that claims to be safe to the

environment 

> and people.

 

Except for those who need to breathe.

 

The bottom line is that regardless of the chemical makeup, any gas used for

computer room fire suppression is going to displace the oxygen that people

need to breathe.  What I was told by the experts way back when is that "if

the Halon dumps, hold your breath and 

leave the room immediately."  That's why the Halon alarm is loud 

enough to wake the dead in the next county.  I heard it once and I was

across the hall in my office.  Fortunately that was only from a careless

workman who had accidentally tripped the fire alarm and an alert operator

ran over and held the override button to prevent the Halon from dumping.

Saved us $30,000 in 1981.

 

 

/Leonard

 

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