Car Hits Utility Pole, Takes Out EC2 Datacenter
1sockchuck writes "An Amazon cloud computing data center lost power Tuesday when a vehicle struck a nearby utility pole. When utility power was lost, a transfer switch in the data center failed to properly manage the shift to backup power. Amazon said a "small number" of EC2 customers lost service for about an hour, but the downtime followed three power outages last week at data centers supporting EC2 customers. Tuesday's incident is reminiscent of a 2007 outage at a Dallas data center when a truck crash took out a power transformer."
It seems you didn't RTFM. Only one switch out of many failed, due to it being set up from the factory incorrectly. The rest of the system switched over properly. I would say that is pretty good considering the data center size and number of switches needed for redundancy.
All a fuse is is a piece of metal that will melt fairly quickly when a given amount of current is passed through it. Idea being that it heats up and melts before the wires can. So, the bigger the current, the more robust the metal connecting it. A 100A fuse is usually a fairly large strip of steel.
Now I'll admit that just grabbing an approximate size of steel and placing it in as the GP did isn't going to yield a nice precise fuse. It may have been too high a current. However, it'd work for getting things running again and probably provide a modicum of protection in the event of a short.
The hots are black, red, and blue (in that order of prevalence) in the US.
When was the last time anyone heard of a TV Network going dark for an hour?
Hmm, let me think. How about yesterday?