No Fix
It’s official. The splice in the power wire to the barn was not the point of failure. Where does that leave things? Right where I didn’t want them. The electricians were unable to tell me where the break in the buried wire might be occurring.
For the time being, I have chosen to continue to rely on one “hot” line providing 120VAC to all the circuits in the barn. That is the way we have been operating since the problem initially occurred in January, and it has proved to be sufficient.
Since we haven’t been able to come up with an explanation for the failure of the one line, I’m concerned about the potential risk of the other line suffering the same fate, which would leave us with no power at all in the barn. The guys said they see this kind of thing with a surprising regularity.
Apparently, there is a lot more going on underground than I realized. The causes they’ve seen include tree roots, burrowing critters, and rocks pushing their way into the wires.
My plan, at this point, is to live with the risk. If the remaining power line suddenly fails, we will run an above-ground extension cord until we can get scheduled to have new wires bored beneath the driveway. I asked for a quote for the expense of this work and learned that although it wouldn’t be cheap, it would be less than I anticipated.
We will be saving up for that eventuality. Hopefully, we’ll have years to tuck away the funds.
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Interesting how ‘great minds’ think alike… it seems easier to use a surface power line for the time being if necessary … putting in a new underground one seems the way to go but is it really worth the trouble? I guess the barn only needs lighting on dark winter nights. Here we use easily fitted lines attached to the ceiling..
Ian Rowcliffe
October 11, 2024 at 9:43 am
We also need power in the barn for heaters that keep our waterer from freezing in the winter. The freezing season is getting shorter and shorter, but it still happens that we need to give the horses access to drinking water when winter sinks its teeth into us.
johnwhays
October 12, 2024 at 9:33 am
I hadn’t thought of that: sometime back we had an Israeli family staying with us, and their 14 year old daughter, who rides horse in Israel, was surprised we even had lights in the stables…. very different conditions, we notice.
Ian Rowcliffe
October 13, 2024 at 2:20 am
Similarities and differences, both!
johnwhays
October 13, 2024 at 11:40 am