Worked a cronic support call where their internet would bounce at noon every 
workday. The Cisco 1601 or 1700 Router that had there T1 in, ended up being on 
top a microwave. Weeks of troubleshooting and shipping new routers on this one.

Also had another one where the router was plugged in to an outlet that was 
controlled by a light switch, discovered this after shipping them two new 
routers.

Customer had there building remodeled and the techs counldn't find the T1 
Smartjack for the building. The contract who did the remodel job, decided it 
would be a good idea to cut out the section of wall where the telco equipment 
was and mounted it to the ceiling. It's new location was in the ladys bathroom, 
above the drop ceiling mounted to the building's rafters 10' in the air.

Customer needed a new router, because the first one died. It was a machine shop 
and they mounted the router to the wall next to a lathe or drill press that 
used oil to cool the bit while it was cutting. It looked like some dumped the 
router in a bucket of oil when we got it back.

Arriving at another large colo for a buildout. Only to find that our ASR9K that 
arrived 2 weeks ago was stored outside on the load dock which has no roof or 
locked gate. I guess that why Cisco put the plastic bag over the chassis when 
there shipped.

Colo techs at another larger colo decided to unpack our router which was a 
fully loaded 1/2 rack chassis. Since they couldn't lift it, they tipped the 
router on the side and walked it back by shifting the weight from one corner of 
the chassis to another. Bending the chassis. I could see the scrap marks in the 
floor from it.

We had colo space in top floor of an ATT CO where we put a Cisco 7513 to 
terminate about a dozen CHDS3's. The roof was leaking and instead of fixing the 
roof. The fix was to put a sheet of plastic over our cabinet. It was more like 
a tent over the cabinet.  A pool of water formed in a diviot at the top and it 
was 120+ degrees under the plastic tarp.

Our office was in a work loft off an older building and they had the AC unit 
mounted to the ceiling with a drip pan underneath them. Well, AC on the 2nd 
floor had the pump for the drip pan died. Who every installed the drip pan 
didn't secure it or center it under the AC unit. It filled up with water and 
since it was not secured and was off centered. The drip pan came crashing down 
with a few gallons of water. The water worked it's way over to the wall and 
traveled down one story in the building. The floor below had all the telco 
equipment mounted to that same wall and the water flowed down right through a 
couple of ATT's Ciena mounted to the wall shorting them out. I was at the 
Chicago Nanog Hackathon on Sunday and was called out to work that one 😕

Was working in the back of a cabinet that had -48 VDC power for a Cisco Router, 
a screw fell and shorted out the power. My co worker who was standing in front 
of the rack wasn't happy because the ADC PowerWorx Fuse panel was about 6" from 
his face where he was working. It had those little black alarm fuses, that had 
the spring-loaded arm. When it tripped a nice shower of sparks had flew right 
at his face Luckly he wore glasses.

I was 18 at my first IT job and it was a brand-new building. I was plugging in 
a 208VAC 30A APC UPS in the server room the electrican had just energized and 
check the circuit. I plugged in the APC UPS and gave it a good turn for the 
twist lock plug to catch and KA BAMB!!! Sparks came shooting out of the outlet 
at me. I think I pooped myself that day. Turns out the electricians deiced that 
a single Gange electrical box was good enough for a 208 VAC 30A outlet, that 
barely fit in the box. Didn't put any tape around the wire terminals. When they 
energized the circuit there was enough of an air gap that the hot screw didn't 
ground out. When I gave it that good old twist while plugging in the APC, I 
grounded the hot screw to the side of the electrical box.






________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+esundberg=nitelusa....@nanog.org> on behalf of Seth 
Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us>
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2021 10:23 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: Famous operational issues

On 2/18/21 1:07 AM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
> On that note, I'd be very interested in hearing stories of actual
> incidents that are the cause of why cardboard boxes are banned in many
> facilities, due to loose particulate matter getting into the air and
> setting off very sensitive fire detection systems.
>


I had a customer that tried to stack their servers - no rails except the
bottom most one - using 2x4's between each server. Up until then I
hadn't imagined anyone would want to fill their cabinet with wood, so I
made a rule to ban wood and anything tangentially related (cardboard,
paper, plastic, etc.). Easier to just ban all things. Fire reasons too
but mainly I thought a cabinet full of wood was too stupid to allow.

The "no wood" rule has become a fun story to tell everyone who asks how
that ended up being a rule. The wood customer turned out to be a
complete a-hole anyway, wood was just the tip of the iceberg.

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