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Old September 10th 03, 12:46 PM posted to uk.transport.london,uk.transport,uk.railway
Cast_Iron Cast_Iron is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jul 2003
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Default A light shines where there was none

Initial investigation into the London blackout revel the cause.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/3096098.stm

Wrong equipment caused blackout

An incorrect piece of equipment caused the power cut which plunged much of
London and the South East into darkness, according to a preliminary report
by the National Grid.
The report says it was the largest power cut from the National Grid for 10
years and the company expressed "its deep regret".
About 1,600 trains were stopped and 60% of the London Underground network
was closed, stranding 250,000 during the evening rush hour.
Electricity was restored in 41 minutes and the outage affected 410,000 homes
and businesses, according to the report.
The company says a failed transformer at the Hurst substation near Bexley in
Kent on 28 August, triggered the outage.
Maintenance work
National Grid switched the transformer out of service at 1820 BST and power
was re-routed through other circuits so it could still flow.
But within seven seconds another fault occurred which stopped the flow of
electricity on a 275,000-volt underground cable between the New Cross and
Wimbledon substations.
There are usually two circuits operating between the substations but one was
not functioning because of maintenance work.
According to the report, the second fault occurred because automatic
protection equipment shut off the power thinking there was a fault with the
supply, because of the action taken to compensate for the defective
transformer.
The report adds that this occurred because "an incorrect protection relay
was installed when old equipment was replaced in 2001".
National Grid has so far checked 9,000 out of 45,000 other similar pieces of
equipment across the network and found them to be working as normal.
Blackout trends
The remaining equipment will be checked within four weeks.
But it added: "The incident on the areas of south London was exacerbated by
the loss of supply to the [London] underground and railway services."
It comes as the Department of Trade and Industry and energy regulator Ofgem
said they will appoint specialist consultants to carry out initial
fact-finding investigation into the blackout.
The inquiry will also cover blackouts in the West Midlands last Friday and
power failures in the last five years to see if any trends can be
identified.