Shoddy wiring in Iraq a 'Systematic Problem'

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Shoddy wiring in Iraq a 'Systematic Problem'

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WASHINGTON — Shoddy electrical work by private contractors on United States military bases in Iraq is widespread and dangerous, causing more deaths and injuries from fires and shocks than the Pentagon has acknowledged, according to internal Army documents.

During just one six-month period — August 2006 through January 2007 — at least 283 electrical fires destroyed or damaged American military facilities in Iraq, including the military’s largest dining hall in the country, documents obtained by The New York Times show. Two soldiers died in an electrical fire at their base near Tikrit in 2006, the records note, while another was injured while jumping from a burning guard tower in May 2007.

And while the Pentagon has previously reported that 13 Americans have been electrocuted in Iraq, many more have been injured, some seriously, by shocks, according to the documents. A log compiled earlier this year at one building complex in Baghdad disclosed that soldiers complained of receiving electrical shocks in their living quarters on an almost daily basis.

Electrical problems were the most urgent noncombat safety hazard for soldiers in Iraq, according to an Army survey issued in February 2007. It noted “a safety threat theaterwide created by the poor-quality electrical fixtures procured and installed, sometimes incorrectly, thus resulting in a significant number of fires.”

The Army report said KBR, the Houston-based company that is responsible for providing basic services for American troops in Iraq, including housing, did its own study and found a “systemic problem” with electrical work.

But the Pentagon did little to address the issue until a Green Beret, Staff Sgt. Ryan D. Maseth, was electrocuted in January while showering. His death, caused by poor electrical grounding, drew the attention of lawmakers and Pentagon leaders after his family pushed for answers. Congress and the Pentagon’s inspector general have begun investigations, and this month senior Army officials ordered electrical inspections of all buildings in Iraq maintained by KBR.

“We consider this to be a very serious issue,” Chris Isleib, a Pentagon spokesman, said Thursday in an e-mail message, while declining to comment on the findings in the Army documents.

Heather Browne, a KBR spokeswoman, would not comment about a company safety study or the reports of electrical fires or shocks, but she said KBR had found no evidence of a link between its work and the electrocutions. She added, “KBR’s commitment to the safety of all employees and those the company serves remains unwavering.”

In public statements, Pentagon officials have not addressed the scope of the hazards, instead mostly focusing on the circumstances surrounding the death of Sergeant Maseth, who lived near Pittsburgh.

But the internal documents, including dozens of memos, e-mail messages and reports from the Army, the Defense Contract Management Agency and other agencies, show that electrical problems were widely recognized as a major safety threat among Pentagon contracting experts. It is impossible to determine the exact number of the resulting deaths and injuries because no single document tallies them up. (The records were compiled for Congressional and Pentagon investigators and obtained independently by The Times.)

The 2007 safety survey was ordered by the top official in Iraq for the Defense Contract Management Agency, which oversees contractors, after the October 2006 electrical fire that killed two soldiers near Tikrit. Paul Dickinson, a Pentagon safety specialist who wrote the report, confirmed its findings, but did not elaborate.

Senior Pentagon officials appear not to have responded to the survey until this May, after Congressional investigators had begun to ask questions. Then they argued that its findings were irrelevant to Sergeant Maseth’s electrocution.

In a memo dated May 26, 2008, a top official of the Defense Contract Management Agency stated that “there is no direct or causal connection” between the problems identified in the survey and those at the Baghdad compound where Sergeant Maseth died.

But in a sworn statement, apparently prepared for an investigation of Sergeant Maseth’s death by the Army’s Criminal Investigative Division, a Pentagon contracting official described how both military and KBR officials were aware of the growing danger from poor electrical work.

In the statement, Ingrid Harrison, an official with the Pentagon’s contracting management agency, disclosed that an electrical fire caused by poor wiring in a nearby building two weeks before Sergeant Maseth’s death had endangered two other soldiers.

“The soldiers were lucky because the one window that they could reach did not have bars on it, or there could have been two other fatalities,” Ms. Harrison said in the statement. She said that after Sergeant Maseth died, a more senior Pentagon contracting official in Baghdad denied knowing about the fire, but she asserted that “it was thoroughly discussed” during internal meetings.

Ms. Harrison added that KBR officials also knew of widespread electrical problems at the Radwaniya Palace Complex, near Baghdad’s airport, where Sergeant Maseth died. “KBR has been at R.P.C. for over four years and was fully aware of the safety hazards, violations and concerns regarding the soldiers’ housing,” she said in the statement. She added that the contractor “chose to ignore the known unsafe conditions.”

Ms. Harrison did not respond to a request for comment.

In another internal document written after Sergeant Maseth’s death, a senior Army officer in Baghdad warned that soldiers had to be moved immediately from several buildings because of electrical risks. In a memo asking for emergency repairs at three buildings, the official warned of a “clear and present danger,” adding, “Exposed wiring, ungrounded distribution panels and inappropriate lighting fixtures render these facilities uninhabitable and unsafe.”

The memo added that “over the course of several months, electrical fires and shorts have compounded these unsafe conditions.”

Since the United States invaded Iraq in 2003, tens of thousands of American troops have been housed in Iraqi buildings that date from the Saddam Hussein era. KBR and other contractors have been paid millions of dollars to repair and upgrade the buildings, including their electrical systems. KBR officials say they handle the maintenance for 4,000 structures and an additional 35,000 containers used as housing in the war zone.

The reports of shoddy electrical work have raised new questions about the Bush administration’s heavy reliance on contractors in Iraq, particularly because they come after other high-profile disputes involving KBR. They include accusations of overbilling, providing unsafe water to soldiers and failing to protect female employees who were sexually assaulted.

Officials say the administration contracted out so much work in Iraq that companies like KBR were simply overwhelmed by the scale of the operations. Some of the electrical work, for example, was turned over to subcontractors, some of which hired unskilled Iraqis who were paid only a few dollars a day.

Government officials responsible for contract oversight, meanwhile, were also unable to keep up, so that unsafe electrical work was not challenged by government auditors.

Several electricians who worked for KBR have said previously in interviews that they repeatedly warned KBR managers and Pentagon and military officials about unsafe electrical work. They said that supervisors had ignored their concerns or, in some cases, lacked the training to understand the problems.

The Army documents cite a number of recent safety threats. One report showed that during a four-day period in late February, soldiers at a Baghdad compound reported being shocked while taking showers in different buildings. The circumstances appear similar to those that led to Sergeant Maseth’s death.

Another entry from early March stated that an entire house used by American troops was electrically charged, making it unlivable.

Since the Pentagon reports were compiled, more episodes linked to electrical problems have occurred. In late June, for example, an electrical fire at a Marine base in Falluja destroyed 10 buildings, forcing marines there to ask for donations from home to replace their personal belongings.

On July 5, Sgt. First Class Anthony Lynn Woodham of the Arkansas National Guard died at his base in Tallil, Iraq. Initial reports blamed electrocution, but his death is being investigated because of conflicting information, according to his wife, Crystal Woodham, and a spokesman for the Arkansas National Guard.
Man oh man. An entire building electrified. Hundreds of fires. Injuries and fatalities. All preventable, except KBR and Pentagon supervisors blew it off or didn't know what the fuck they were doing.

The Iraq War, right in a nutshell.
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Post by white_rabbit »

Man oh man. An entire building electrified. Hundreds of fires. Injuries and fatalities. All preventable, except KBR and Pentagon supervisors blew it off or didn't know what the fuck they were doing.
What would happen if this sort of workmanship was endemic in a project or series of projects based in America itself ?

Because this sort of thing would get you absolutely fucking crucified in the UK, the directors and senior company officials could even get jail time themselves, unlimited fines etc.
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Re: Shoddy wiring in Iraq a 'Systematic Problem'

Post by MKSheppard »

Didn't we already do this about a month ago? And wasn't the conclusion that it wasn't OMG T3H EVAL CONTRACTORS, but the fact that the Army was footdragging in issuing a contract to fix the problems that KBR had identified?

As for there being a fuckload of electrical fires, I'm not exactly surprised by that -- we're still using a lot of Saddam era stuff, which isn't exactly the height of modernity in regards to electrical codes.

I think what the real problem is isn't the fact that many panels are ungrounded (the Navy doesn't ground a lot of it's electrical wiring onboard ships); but because the Army is pulling so much load on the wiring with all the computers, televisions, X-Boxes, DVD players etc that a unit brings with them that the wiring heats up from all the excess amperage that's being put on it, and then fwoosh.
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Re: Shoddy wiring in Iraq a 'Systematic Problem'

Post by SirNitram »

MKSheppard wrote:Didn't we already do this about a month ago? And wasn't the conclusion that it wasn't OMG T3H EVAL CONTRACTORS, but the fact that the Army was footdragging in issuing a contract to fix the problems that KBR had identified?
You determined that. And this time, instead of reading, you just regurgitated. If you had read before posting, you would have noticed..
All preventable, except KBR and Pentagon supervisors blew it off or didn't know what the fuck they were doing.
I realize you're an idiot, but you could at least try and fake competence.
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Re: Shoddy wiring in Iraq a 'Systematic Problem'

Post by MKSheppard »

SirNitram wrote:You determined that.

...

I realize you're an idiot, but you could at least try and fake competence.
You realize you're lecturing a motherfucking electrician on electrical problems?

What the fuck do you know about electricity, other than the fact that it comes out of wall sockets and it can kill you? Have you had to size an electrical circuit as part of your curriculum? If not, then shut the motherfucking fuck up.
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Re: Shoddy wiring in Iraq a 'Systematic Problem'

Post by Mr. Coffee »

SirNitram wrote:You determined that. And this time, instead of reading, you just regurgitated. If you had read before posting, you would have noticed..
Did you even read your own damned article, Nitram?
The Army report said KBR, the Houston-based company that is responsible for providing basic services for American troops in Iraq, including housing, did its own study and found a “systemic problem” with electrical work.

But the Pentagon did little to address the issue until a Green Beret, Staff Sgt. Ryan D. Maseth, was electrocuted in January while showering. His death, caused by poor electrical grounding, drew the attention of lawmakers and Pentagon leaders after his family pushed for answers. Congress and the Pentagon’s inspector general have begun investigations, and this month senior Army officials ordered electrical inspections of all buildings in Iraq maintained by KBR.
Wow, seems like the article is saying the exact same fucking thing that Shep is...

Who'd a thunk it, *I'm a smarmy asshole*?
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Post by SirNitram »

Several electricians who worked for KBR have said previously in interviews that they repeatedly warned KBR managers and Pentagon and military officials about unsafe electrical work. They said that supervisors had ignored their concerns or, in some cases, lacked the training to understand the problems.
Gosh, is that the article citing people familiar with the work, saying the exact same thing as me? Who'd thunk it!
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Post by MKSheppard »

I'll do a hypothetical problem

Barracks for 200 men -- 1/4 are going to be in it at any one time.

That's fifty guys -- lets assume that 25% are going to be asleep at any one time. That leaves us with 38 very bored motherfuckers™.

Checking the small TV in the kitchen upstairs it draws about 0.54 amps. We'll use that as an average for the typical electrical equipment that each VBM™ is using. We'll assume three (Television, Game System, and Laptop being recharged). That's 1.62 amps per VBM™.

At 38 VBM™, that's 61.56 amps, which is a pretty hefty load. In most places, to save money, the general lighting needs are also fed by the same circuit as the receptacles are.

Then we get into such fun things as de-rating -- the ambient temperature in Iraq is really goddamn hot, it's like 110F easily in the shade in a lot of Iraq; and that means the actual ampacity of the wires is going to be derated even further to take into account ambient temperatures.

I don't have on hand my 2005 NEC, so I can't find their tables for ampacity and derating factors for the most common wiring types; but trust me, all those factors I listed are more than sufficient to start a fire, especially when you drop a huge load onto a building whose wiring was originally at best sufficient for some lighting, a window air conditioner, and a couple electrical appliances.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

Mr. Coffee wrote:Wow, seems like the article is saying the exact same fucking thing that Shep is...

Who'd a thunk it, *I'm a smarmy asshole*?
Did either of you actually bother to read a bit further in the article:
“The soldiers were lucky because the one window that they could reach did not have bars on it, or there could have been two other fatalities,” Ms. Harrison said in the statement. She said that after Sergeant Maseth died, a more senior Pentagon contracting official in Baghdad denied knowing about the fire, but she asserted that “it was thoroughly discussed” during internal meetings.

Ms. Harrison added that KBR officials also knew of widespread electrical problems at the Radwaniya Palace Complex, near Baghdad’s airport, where Sergeant Maseth died. “KBR has been at R.P.C. for over four years and was fully aware of the safety hazards, violations and concerns regarding the soldiers’ housing,” she said in the statement. She added that the contractor “chose to ignore the known unsafe conditions.”

Ms. Harrison did not respond to a request for comment.
What was that? The contractor "chose to ingore the known unsafe conditions"?

Thought so.

We've got a clear case of contractor negligence which has been an ongoing situation for four fucking years now, for which KBR chose to do nothing.

Neither of you has an argument.
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Post by MKSheppard »

Patrick Degan wrote:What was that? The contractor "chose to ingore the known unsafe conditions"?
We went over this in the last thread -- the Army didn't issue a contract for KBR to fix the wiring; hence KBR "ignored" it. In electrical work, you don't do things without a contract and lots of legalese to cover your ass.
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Post by SirNitram »

MKSheppard wrote:I'll do a hypothetical problem
I'll cite the non-hypothetical opinions of those who looked at the work.
Several electricians who worked for KBR have said previously in interviews that they repeatedly warned KBR managers and Pentagon and military officials about unsafe electrical work. They said that supervisors had ignored their concerns or, in some cases, lacked the training to understand the problems.
Are you done yet? You're an eletrician. Yay. So are these people. Difference: They worked on this project, so they have what? More information than you!
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Post by Lonestar »

Shep's right, the fact that KBR ran it's own study and found the problems, well, it definitely seems to imply that would be something they'd tell the government.

(Anecdotally, this is something I've seen gone on at my own place of work. We tell goverment this this and this is wrong and will cause trouble down the road, government ignores it, systems goes down and government acts all surprised when it's traced back to what we said it would be.)
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Post by MKSheppard »

SirNitram wrote:Are you done yet? You're an eletrician. Yay. So are these people. Difference: They worked on this project, so they have what? More information than you!
And I know how power-hungry the US Military is nowadays. I bet you dollars to donuts this is what happened:
  • KBR Electricans show up.
  • KBR Electricians walk through FOB, see enormous electrical problems, like I dunno, six extension cords with all of their receptacles in use being run off a single 15 amp receptacle.
  • KBR Electricians go "Oh shit" and add that to their list of violations
  • KBR Electricians hand in the list of violations to the base commander.
  • Base commander says "fuck you, I'm not going to tell my men to stop using their DVD players"
  • KBR Electricians file their report back home with huge caveats -- dangerously unsafe overloaded systems etc.
  • Army doesn't issue a contract to increase the ampacity capacity of the electrical systems at the FOB until a couple of bad electrical fires.
  • KBR Electricians Vindicated
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Post by SirNitram »

MKSheppard wrote:
SirNitram wrote:Are you done yet? You're an eletrician. Yay. So are these people. Difference: They worked on this project, so they have what? More information than you!
And I know how power-hungry the US Military is nowadays. I bet you dollars to donuts this is what happened:
  • KBR Electricans show up.
  • KBR Electricians walk through FOB, see enormous electrical problems, like I dunno, six extension cords with all of their receptacles in use being run off a single 15 amp receptacle.
  • KBR Electricians go "Oh shit" and add that to their list of violations
  • KBR Electricians hand in the list of violations to the base commander.
  • Base commander says "fuck you, I'm not going to tell my men to stop using their DVD players"
  • KBR Electricians file their report back home with huge caveats -- dangerously unsafe overloaded systems etc.
  • Army doesn't issue a contract to increase the ampacity capacity of the electrical systems at the FOB until a couple of bad electrical fires.
  • KBR Electricians Vindicated
Which would only be a valid criticism of me if I had not, in the originating post, specifically pointed out the Pentagon was blowing things off or just clueless. You know, the Pentagon. The Army. The people who are blamed in the so-called 'rebuttals' to me.

So in short, read what I wrote, not what you hallucinate.
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Post by Ender »

MKSheppard wrote:
SirNitram wrote:Are you done yet? You're an eletrician. Yay. So are these people. Difference: They worked on this project, so they have what? More information than you!
And I know how power-hungry the US Military is nowadays. I bet you dollars to donuts this is what happened:
  • KBR Electricans show up.
  • KBR Electricians walk through FOB, see enormous electrical problems, like I dunno, six extension cords with all of their receptacles in use being run off a single 15 amp receptacle.
  • KBR Electricians go "Oh shit" and add that to their list of violations
  • KBR Electricians hand in the list of violations to the base commander.
  • Base commander says "fuck you, I'm not going to tell my men to stop using their DVD players"
  • KBR Electricians file their report back home with huge caveats -- dangerously unsafe overloaded systems etc.
  • Army doesn't issue a contract to increase the ampacity capacity of the electrical systems at the FOB until a couple of bad electrical fires.
  • KBR Electricians Vindicated
I'd edit this list to include military electricians rewiring and building their own setups to handle the load they want and ignoring the regulations in doing so (e.g. sticking a 30 amp fuse into a lighting panel so that your splice for the rec center doesn't blow out the fuses for the entire area). Not that I ever did that...
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Post by Lonestar »

SirNitram wrote:
Which would only be a valid criticism of me if I had not, in the originating post, specifically pointed out the Pentagon was blowing things off or just clueless. You know, the Pentagon. The Army. The people who are blamed in the so-called 'rebuttals' to me.

So in short, read what I wrote, not what you hallucinate.
Dude, you specifically included KBR in it include the eeeevvvviiilllll contractors, when 90, 95 percent of the blame goes to the government(I would say an infinitesimal amount of the blame goes to the contractors in this instance). Y:roll:

Fuck, you know what I think happened? I think KBR did the study, it got up to PM level, PM tells government contract manager, contract manager says "fuck off" or "we'll burn that bridge when we get to it"(It's funny except I've seen that exact phrase in an email by a contract manager), PM called corporate, corporate said "Alright, we aren't going to bang our heads against the wall over this" and government acted surprised/treated it as a one-off when Bad Things happened.
Ender wrote: I'd edit this list to include military electricians rewiring and building their own setups to handle the load they want and ignoring the regulations in doing so (e.g. sticking a 30 amp fuse into a lighting panel so that your splice for the rec center doesn't blow out the fuses for the entire area). Not that I ever did that...
Or Combat Systems guys rewiring huge parts of the ship under the pretense of "last minute load center calibration" while creating their own LAN for computer gaming.
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Post by Mr. Coffee »

Patrick Degan wrote:We've got a clear case of contractor negligence which has been an ongoing situation for four fucking years now, for which KBR chose to do nothing.

Neither of you has an argument.
Bullshit. The DoD never gave KBR a contract to fix the electrical faults they found. Or are you one of those clueless fucks that think contractors should be held responsible for not doing work they never were contracted to do in the first place?

I see this sort of shit on a damned near daily basis working a flooring contractor. I inspect a job site, tell the home builder something is wrong that will screw up my installation, they do nothing about it and either sign off on my installing as is or don't issue me the contract. Either way, the problem is theirs and not mine to deal with until they contract me to do it.

By your fucked up logic if I see a fault in the slab that was the doing of the concrete contractor then I should fix it without having received a contract or even permission from the home builder to do it.
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Post by MKSheppard »

Lonestar wrote:PM called corporate, corporate said "Alright, we aren't going to bang our heads against the wall over this" and government acted surprised/treated it as a one-off when Bad Things happened.
You forgot corporate burying the government under a pile of reports prepared for the eventuality of asscovering.

Government: "You didn't do anything!" *Whines a bit more*

Corporate:" Yes we did! Here's the reports all documenting the problems and predicting exactly what would happen, and here's a document in which you essentially blow us off."

Government: *mutters darkly*
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Post by SirNitram »

Lonestar wrote:
SirNitram wrote:
Which would only be a valid criticism of me if I had not, in the originating post, specifically pointed out the Pentagon was blowing things off or just clueless. You know, the Pentagon. The Army. The people who are blamed in the so-called 'rebuttals' to me.

So in short, read what I wrote, not what you hallucinate.
Dude, you specifically included KBR in it include the eeeevvvviiilllll contractors, when 90, 95 percent of the blame goes to the government(I would say an infinitesimal amount of the blame goes to the contractors in this instance). Y:roll:
Here's me having the crazy fucking idea that a supervisor of an electrician might want to know enough to understand when he's told about a problem. You know, one of those things mentioned. By actual electricians familiar with the work.

Again, we get back to people not reading the first post, and making a rather ineffective attempt to paint the comment I made as something other than what it is.
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Lonestar
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Post by Lonestar »

SirNitram wrote:
Here's me having the crazy fucking idea that a supervisor of an electrician might want to know enough to understand when he's told about a problem. You know, one of those things mentioned. By actual electricians familiar with the work.

Again, we get back to people not reading the first post, and making a rather ineffective attempt to paint the comment I made as something other than what it is.
The "Blew off" comment is what's making me(and others) pissed off, by giving KBR equal part culpability in the debacle. KBR supervisors almost certainly did not "Blow off" the issue, especially since they conducted their own internal study of it. The far, far more likely thing is that the government contract manager gave them the brush off. And if the government manager(because he doesn't have the money, time, or authorization to tell the contractor to fix it) gives you the brush off....guess what.

There aren't shit that can be about it. Nada. Oh sure, I suppose you could go to congress, of course then when your existing contract comes up for renewal someone else will get it.

But hey, fuck those KBR supervisors(I guess it was a journeyman electrician Smith who did that study all by his lonesome) who "blew off" the problem.
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Post by Mr Bean »

Let me add in this, as contractors KBR is only responsible to fulfill the contract they are assigned. As was the case right after the invasion if you rewire a building to be sufficient to run a small office then instead of an office you turn the building into a barracks and cram forty soldiers and all their equipment in their, then your going to have issues.

Second as noted, likely under the law the KBR contractors are using US certified materials and having to interface it with a non-US power grid(Fun problem number one) which is know to have issues with brown out's and power spikes. Add in a shitty local power grid to a environment which can be best describes as "in the top three worst places on the planet for electrical equipment" and your going to have issues no matter how good your initial job is.

Let me remind you that these installs were not done yesterday, in fact some of these installs were years old at this point, we invaded in March of 2003 and KBR contractors were on the ground within a month of the invasion and work in the country to this day. But considering what a cluster fuck the invasion aftermath was and the way contracts were handled out, I would be very surprised if little things like routine maintenance and twice a year electrical checkup's were done.

Add in the shear number of jobs that need doing and bonuses provided for completion and you can see the way my song is going.

Take shitty oversight of usage, combine with materials designed for for DC standards not Iraqi standards, add in a shitty power grid, tons of work, few workers, no maintenance and you don't need incompetent installers in order to have electrical fires or anything similar. Are some of these bad install jobs? Most likley yes, but I can tell you also that it is not a majority of them, not even a strong minority of them. When all's said and done I'll bet you good money the number of honest to Xenu shit installs which were not reported to the government or were gun decked by contractors can be counted on the fingers of one hand.

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Post by Coyote »

MKSheppard wrote:Then we get into such fun things as de-rating -- the ambient temperature in Iraq is really goddamn hot, it's like 110F easily in the shade in a lot of Iraq...
In the summer it's worse, we were topping 130F easily for days on end in Taji Air Force Base. During the two months I did convoy ops out of there, I don't think there was a day under 100F.

That kind of tempurature drives more guys inside-- not just because they're whinging, our commanders wanted people to stay out of the heat unless they were on duty-- for obvious heat injury related reasons.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

MKSheppard wrote:
Patrick Degan wrote:What was that? The contractor "chose to ingore the known unsafe conditions"?
We went over this in the last thread -- the Army didn't issue a contract for KBR to fix the wiring; hence KBR "ignored" it. In electrical work, you don't do things without a contract and lots of legalese to cover your ass.
The article, again:
KBR and other contractors have been paid millions of dollars to repair and upgrade the buildings, including their electrical systems.
Now, do explain to the class how KBR gets paid millions of dollars for work they supposedly weren't contracted for —which, BTW, includes fixing the wiring in the fucking buildings. As per the article.
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Mr Bean
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Post by Mr Bean »

Patrick Degan wrote:
KBR and other contractors have been paid millions of dollars to repair and upgrade the buildings, including their electrical systems.
Now, do explain to the class how KBR gets paid millions of dollars for work they supposedly weren't contracted for —which, BTW, includes fixing the wiring in the fucking buildings. As per the article.
To..what...standards...?
I'll repeat that again, are the standards the same as the ones the building currently being used as? Also when was the work done? Is this a building who's wiring has been subjected to dozens of power spikes, voltage drops and modification by the local units stationed there. Lets take the example of the poorly grounded shower wiring. Was it bad wiring to begin with that inspectors failed to check? Did it become ungrounded via building work? Did extreme heat and humidity cause the casing on the wires to break years ahead of their lifetime? Was building usage above standard? For fuck sake do we even know if the shower was an origional part of the building or installed afterwords.
We don't know


Let me add this as another direct response to Degan's quote, you don't know the details, contracts are highly specific, if they were assigned to upgrade said building and they did that in 2004, and a fault occurs in 2005, then the contractor does not and will not go back in to fix the new issue. That's a common issue with government contracts

Let me put in this addedium since this falls under one part of the work I myself have done in the past

Post reconstruction one of the long term goals was the upgrading and replacing of the entire power grid and the power plants themselves.

Yet that power grid has been attacked, sabotage and a lack of trained workers(Which large numbers had been either killed, fled or force to quit by threats of violence) has led to a large number of accidents in various areas.

Simply put the power being put out is both erratic and "dirty" in the sense that it's neither constant nor always at the voltages and amperage it's supposed to be. And it's been on going for years, wiring in every building in Iraq is going to experience a much higher degradation rate than elsewhere both because of the weather in Iraq and because of the Iraqi power grid being the state it's in now.

Were US inspectors to go in and inspect every wiring job KBR did in 2004 I'd say they'd say a good third of all work done as needing replacement due to degradation.

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Post by MKSheppard »

Here's one such report from KBR about electrical problems:

KBR Investigation of DFAC Electricals
Thls lnspection covered all electricd items within the BESF camp DFAC. The inspection was perfomed by KBR and was completed at 1730 hrs on May 25, 2007.

....

One sample of wire taken frorn the DFAC is labeled as 10mm2, but physically measures only 6mm2.
There's more fun things. That counterfeit wire example? It's on a 60 Amp circuit to two deep fryers.

Even more fun is a 400 amp distribution panel, it has no ground bus or no ground wire. Guess who installed it? First Kuwaiti.

Hell, the entire report is full of "recommend replacement of X wire size with Y wire size" for safety.
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