On Apr 14, 10:33=A0am, You <y...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> In article
> <e5998a2f-5522-4adb-ab8f-8c8d0c6bd...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
>
> =A0jerry <GeraldCNew...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > Remote Gate Valves are controlled through communications by microwave
> > radio systems. The microwave dishes are on towers and when these
> > towers are moved as done with a sonic boom the signal sees a glitch
> > that could cause Gate Valves to malfunction. =A0Again I say could
> > because these systems have not been tested or designed to withstand
> > sonic booms from unknown aircraft since the aircraft were not in
> > existence at the time of the original design. =A0The bottom line is
why
> > subject these systems to extraordinary stresses when the outcome is
> > not known?
>
> Jerry, what you know of about the Microwave Backbone for the Pipeline
> can be put on the head of a Pin.... AND it mostly has been replaced
> with Fiber in that last 4 years...... =A0Sonny, I have reinstalled
> old Grainger Radio Stuff that can from the preliminary Pipeline Backbone
> System, all over Alaska.... and most of that stuff has since been
> replaced, and junked, since then.... =A0and NO, they in fact don't
"Glitch=
"
> due to Vibration, as that whole Backbone was a Diversity Hot Standby
> System that used Multiple Antennas on each Path, to deal, not with Sonic
> Booms but High Winds, commonly found on Mountain Tops, where most of the
> Backbone HighSites are located..... =A0
>
> Keep digging Jerry, the hole your in now, is getting deeper with each
> post......
Gotcha, the fiber did not prove out. It failed miserably. You radio
hams, just can't admit failure. Your systems fail and sonic booms
cause an unknown stress. Go back to school and study risk managment
for a while. Most of the failures go unre****ted. Pipeline
contractors and direct hires know the consequences of telling anyone
what really goes on.


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