LOL! I would be too. Back in the 80's an internal IT auditor where I worked walked into one of our plant's computer rooms and asked how their disaster recovery plan was. Upon hearing that "It's good - we're solid" he walked over to the breaker and pulled the handle down! It was a IBM System-38 and they were down for over a week! As you said in your initial post, I'm sure it's been tested by the manufacturers, but I don't need to replicate that test.I do but I’m to chicken shit to try it. ?
I can try it for you tonight and let you know. I'll do it in a bit ;-)I do but I’m to chicken shit to try it. ?
Loved it!LOL! I would be too. Back in the 80's an internal IT auditor where I worked walked into one of our plant's computer rooms and asked how their disaster recovery plan was. Upon hearing that "It's good - we're solid" he walked over to the breaker and pulled the handle down! It was a IBM System-38 and they were down for over a week! As you said in your initial post, I'm sure it's been tested by the manufacturers, but I don't need to replicate that test.
I have a tesla wall connector and an adapter but it's a different brand (it's a very generic one actually), I can test that for you now as well.Thank you very much for conducting this test.
Can I send you my Telsa Wall Connector with my Teslatap mini adapter to retest? ?
I have some comfort now and won’t be as chicken shit when an outage occurs while charging.![]()
Yeah, I remember when my flight instructor did basically the same thing in a Cessna 150 at 5,000 feet. Just cut the engine and said (deadpan) "oh, no! Engine failure! What do you do?" Talk about a hard reboot!he walked over to the breaker and pulled the handle down!
Here ya go, my friendThank you very much for conducting this test.
Can I send you my Telsa Wall Connector with my Teslatap mini adapter to retest? ?
I have some comfort now and won’t be as chicken shit when an outage occurs while charging.![]()
During Helicopter training my flight instructor would perform sudden "throttle chops" which rolled the engine to idle speed in flight causing an instant auto-rotation condition where you had just 2-3 seconds to lower the collective (the flight control in a helicopter that resembles the old hand brake handle in a car) to lower the main rotor pitch or the main rotor would under speed then stall causing you to suddenly fall out of the sky and die.Yeah, I remember when my flight instructor did basically the same thing in a Cessna 150 at 5,000 feet. Just cut the engine and said (deadpan) "oh, no! Engine failure! What do you do?" Talk about a hard reboot!