BUT my trains are safe
. I have to get a new sump pump .. it quit and shorted out tripped the efi outlet thank god 2 week wait for a new sump no hardware store in 20 miles has one
.. but .. my trains are all safe!!!! yay!!:cry:


shaygetz said:Glad to see you made it OK...I remember years ago, when TS Agnes did her thing thru Baltimore County back in '72, a modeler related how his basement completely flooded to within inches of the first floor. Thinking it was lost forever, when the waters started subsiding, he was stunned to find that his layout had floated around the whole time, ultimately losing only one trolley to the flood. The soggy wiring dried out and fired up as though nothing had happened. Pretty cool I thought as I was having problems with an interesting fungus growing on all my wood structures on my basement pike around the same time.
A good reason to use lots of wood when building your benchwork.shaygetz said:when the waters started subsiding, he was stunned to find that his layout had floated around the whole time
hooknlad said:Ohhhhhh nooooooooooo - Please please please do not under any circumstance plug a sump pump or refrigerator or freezer on a GFI outlet or a circuit protected with a GFI breaker... The whole idea of the sump pump is to remove water... if the GFI senses an imbalance to ground with water, it will shut off - not removing the water from the basement... i know a fear of electric shock you say? The sump pump should be UL listed and double insulated, it is meant to be under / in water... If your Electric service panel goes under water, then the game is over , all bets are off....
Good luck and hopefully your basement dries up...
jasbourre said:Will this be an insurance job for clean up?
e-paw said::cry: the gfi probably triped from the moter load on the pump and not a short. if you remove the gfi and put in a single recptical with an in use cover in it's place it should not trip and will still meet code.:thumb: