This article was posted 02/13/2013 and is most likely outdated.

Mike Holt - Superbowl Blackout
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Superbowl Outage was Known Fear

Super Bowl Outage was Known Fear

Image1Associated Press, February 8, 2013

NEW ORLEANS -- An electrical device that had been installed expressly to prevent a power outage failed, causing the Super Bowl blackout, the stadium's power company said Friday as it took the blame for the outage that brought the game to a halt for more than a half-hour.

Officials of Entergy New Orleans, a subsidiary of New Orleans-based Entergy Corp., said the device, called a relay, had been installed in switching gear to protect the Superdome from a cable failure between the company's incoming power line and lines that run into the stadium.

The switching gear is housed in a building known as "the vault" near the stadium that receives a line directly from a nearby Entergy power substation. Once the line reaches the vault, it splits into two cables that go into the Superdome.

Company officials said the device performed without problem during January's Sugar Bowl and other earlier events, but has been removed and will be replaced.

All systems at the Superdome are now working and the dome will host a major Mardi Gras event Saturday night, said Doug Thornton, an executive with SMG, the company that manages the stadium for the state.

The power failure at Sunday's big game cut lights to about half of the stadium for 34 minutes, halting play between theBaltimore Ravens and San Francisco 49ers.
The FBI had ruled out cyberterrorism as a cause.

Click here for the rest of the story and broadcast, featured on ESPN.go.com

 

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Comments
  • A relay could be bigger than a truck? Where did this Electrical Engineering professor get his degree?

    Vince  February 18 2013, 9:40 am EST
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  • I expect the relay worked exactly as programmed. They do require practical people to set them up with real life knowledge. Best to leave academics and their comments out of these matters!!

    Roger  February 14 2013, 6:01 pm EST
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  • That assistant professor has no idea what he is talking about. Mike Holt really missed the mark on republishing this one.

    Brad Meyer  February 14 2013, 5:52 pm EST
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  • Some equipments of this type use sensors with adjustable sensitivity and mode settings. It's possible it wasn't programmed to consider a certain type of disturbance or transient for the higher energy demand of the event.

    Definitely the Super Bowl is a bigger load on the system than the Sugar Bowl, which means more amperage flowing. With inadequate parameters, a signal variation may have triggered a protection mode.

    Julio Trujillo  February 14 2013, 2:59 pm EST
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  • A relay as big as a truck? That truck must be real small or the relay is REAL big. So much for credibility. Any one have any real technical info to share?

    Shawn  February 14 2013, 1:58 pm EST
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