[42330] in North American Network Operators' Group

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

Re: Re: AT&T Switch operational in basement of WTC

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Frank Coluccio)
Fri Sep 14 20:57:37 2001

From: Frank Coluccio <fcoluccio@dticonsulting.com>
To: dbs@ntrnet.net
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 23:40:33 GMT
MIME-Version: 1.0
Message-ID: <1000510833.240fcoluccio@dticonsulting.com>
Content-type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu


I have doubts that they were referring to a 5E. Optical muxes, and passive 
optical feeds just passing through, maybe. The node in this case is the old 
Teleport Communications Group main node that became ATT/Local Network Services 
when they were acquired. I posted about this here in NANOG two days ago. It is 
six levels down and amply fitted with backup battery plant to sustain long 
outages, and was conceivably insulated enough to resist the turmoil above for six 
hours of continued service. Some elements in this node also stayed up and running 
for a moderately extended period during the last WTC failure, eight years ago, 
during the bombing incident of 1993. -FAC

> 
> At 08:21 PM 9/14/2001, Randy Neals wrote:
> >AT&T's switch in the basement apparently operated after the collapse until
> >4PM.
> >They expect to recover the switch hardware....
> 
> Gotta love the 5E...
> 
> >So if you can build a switch room that doesn't collapse when 2 x 110 story
> >buildings fall on it, why not get those engineers to design the building so
> >it doesn't collapse in the first place?
> 
> Oh, please...
> 
> An hour or so of 1200-1500+ degrees?
> 
> 



home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post