Pintickler wrote:Has this ever happened to any of you ?
Well not as a locksmith, but I have seen it twice now.
The first time:
The customers complaint was his fire alarm was dead, I checked the panel and there was no 120 volt power, so off I went to find the breaker panel. The owner of the shop advised me his breaker panel was in the meter room and I needed to go over to the real estate office to pick up the key, with the key in hand I opened the meter room door and there was a guy in his underwear sleeping on the floor, I reached under my shirt, un-snapped my holster and with my right hand on the stock of my gun, I tapped the guys foot with my boot while advising him he needs to wake up and move along, no response, so I tapped his foot again and then it hit me, he wasn't breathing.
The second time:
I get a call from my CS, the fire department is out at a strip mall I recently installed a fire alarm in and they cannot locate the fire alarm panel and the system is sounding, I drove out to the location met the Battalion Chief and he followed me around the back of the mall, I pointed at a meter room door that had a red sign on it with the words Fire Alarm Control Panel, the Chief then gave me a "oops we screwed up" look.
I had the keys for the building, but as I went to open the door I noticed someone had used something big, something like a pry bar to force the deadbolt into the un-lathed position and as before, I prepared to draw if needed and went to open the door.
Now before opening the door I did notice an odor like burning electrical gear, as did the Chief, so he had a couple of the fire guys with extinguishers stand by as I opened the door, what we found was unbelievable, the cover on the lower gutter, the line side feeding the watt hour meters had been removed, about three feet of the sheet steel gutter under the meters was burnt away, the wiring inside was charred and against the opposite wall was a persons body, the upper third of which was totally charred, parts of the guys face was literally charred bone, his arms looked like a hot dog that had been left on the grill for way too long, it was a disgusting sight.
I'm looking at this guy and I noticed every two seconds or so he would take a deep breath and exhale, meanwhile the Chief is barking into his radio to have EMS roll around the back of the mall stating "we have a victim in the meter room with severe burns."
Talk about an understatement.
Well it didn't take me long to figure out what happened, the guy was trying to scrap out the live copper wiring and in the process shorted a phase to the grounded gutter, the resulting arc flash and the plasma it produced vaporized his cutter and part of the gutter, blew the guy against the opposite wall and cooked him real good, he died later at Memorial East. He probably would have just died in the meter room only to be discovered on Monday when someone noticed a partial outage, but the smoke produced by the arc flash and his smoldering body tripped the smoke detector I installed in the meter room, which brought out the FD.
FWIW the power was still on, the arc flash, which I am sure pulled thousands of amps, never dropped the primary fuses protecting the utilities distribution transformer, the arc flash as bad as it was, cleared the fault (his cutters), before the fuses warmed up enough to blow.
None the less that had to be a gruesome way to die.
Wayne