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Gentrification of Walking Street will see unsightly cables buried underground


webfact

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1 hour ago, webfact said:

 

He said that the wire burying by the Provincial Electricity Authority was necessary to beautify Walking Street

Necessary but not sufficient. 

 

Beautifying Walking Street, recently rebranded as Drive Thru Street, would require to bury all the buildings gracing both of its sides... but unfortunately the unused drains may not big enough to hide all these horrors... 

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In the UK low tension cable were put 1.5 feet (45cm) underground, high tension a yard (90cm) with a cement high voltage slab above it. Two metres is a laugh.

But these were a stout single cables with services joined to it where required. We could service a street in no time....

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4 minutes ago, bluesofa said:

Captain Mainwaring, doomed.

Well, whatever method they use, a degree of proficiency would be needed, so yes, most likely doomed.  ????

 

Has anyone ever been in a gogo or club on Walking Street when the electricity went out?  

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47 minutes ago, Rimmer said:

Maybe not very well thought out as rats live in underground pipes and culverts and rats just love to eat cables

Yep, if armoured cable is not used in ducting, they will have a problem finding a fault... 

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10 minutes ago, Leaver said:

Well, whatever method they use, a degree of proficiency would be needed, so yes, most likely doomed.  ????

 

Has anyone ever been in a gogo or club on Walking Street when the electricity went out?  

that is decades since, they all have backup generators, or the electric just works on WS

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19 minutes ago, bluesofa said:

Captain Mainwaring, doomed.

 

3 minutes ago, transam said:

Yep, if armoured cable is not used in ducting, they will have a problem finding a fault... 

You can bet someone will cut corners and use the cheapest possible leading to further work and repairing thus more kickbacks.  Sound familiar?

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3 hours ago, webfact said:

It involves using drains that are not in use.

3 hours ago, webfact said:

For some reason these are not in use so why not put the wires and cables in there!


I was here when they put those drains in. They dug a large ditch right down the middle of Walking Street, in the middle of High Season, and laid those pipes. Over 20 years ago.

They should be asking why those drains weren't being used. What were they draining (storm/rain water or sewage) ? Where were the inlets ? Where was the outlet ? 

 

3 hours ago, webfact said:

The wires needed to be buried 1.5 to 2 meters underground. But it was felt that digging a huge trench all the way along the street might have a detrimental effect on tourism in the area.


As noted about, that wasn't an issue 22 years ago. I remember walking on narrow sidewalks on each side of the ditch, in the pouring rain. 2 years later it was completed and I remember sitting beside the street during a monsoon and marvelling at how well the drainage was working.

(You know all those nice hexagonal paving blocks that make up Walking Street ? That was when those were installed.)
 

3 hours ago, webfact said:

with the pipe being as wide as the street itself. 


W.T.Freddie ? As wide as 2 lane road ?!?!? (Which is what Walking street is. Or was.) 
Each lane is what, nearly 3 meters wide ? So they were going to put in a pipe that was 6 meters in diameter !??!?!

They are burying cables, not street cars ! C.rap, the work they are doing on Pattaya Tai isn't that big (as it isn't even a a single lane width for everything they are doing).

Frik, a pipe the width of a 2 lane road, they may as well just say to h3ll with it and turn it into a subway tunnel. 

Got to believe that 10 years from now (or less) they'll be talking about plans to dig up Walking Street to install new storm drains as it seems the old ones were blocked off for some dumb reason and had electrical cables run through them. Cables which don't seem to go anywhere or connect to anything and are sitting in pipes full of old sewage.

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4 hours ago, webfact said:

It involves using drains that are not in use.

 

4 hours ago, webfact said:

For some reason these are not in use so why not put the wires and cables in there!

 

well, it's not raining..........now.

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3 minutes ago, Leaver said:

Don't know.  I've never experienced a electricity outage while out on Walking Street. 

With zillions of cables hanging on lamp posts a fault can be sussed quite easily, when underground it is a different matter, I have the T-shirt, it was my job....????

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