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Any impact to factory? Came here to look.
I live between the epicenter and the factory, about 20 miles as the crow flies from Fremont.
I doubt the the factory was damaged. The shaking woke us up at 3:20am but no damage in my area.
As my handle implies, I live right at ground zero for this quake. I've lived in Northern California for most of my 69 years, and this quake takes the cake. Brutal. Our house is on a hill and we look south across town. Quake lasted about 20 seconds and there must have ben 20 or 30 flashes from transformers/power lines. Power was out, obviously. Figured we'd be without for a while, but they got it back up 2 1/2 hours later. My kids live down in East Bay and one slept through it. Not here! Was happy to know I'd be able to keep my iPhone/iPad charged up using Tess.:smile:
House is fine, but did lose 3 bottles of wine in my cellar. Oh well.Woke me up in the East Bay. Glad you're OK. House still on the foundation? Sounds like a few mobile homes jumped their foundation and ruptured gas lines with resultant fire. Downtown Napa a mess-old brick facades down. Lots of smashed wine bottles....
Glad all of our West Coast TMC friends seem to be ok. On a lighter note, the thread title made me think maybe the 6.0 firmware rollout had begun...
Tess was in the midst of her nightly recharge when the quake hit and power went out. Went down to garage and found Tess with the hatchback open. When I tried to close it, no luck using the button. So just closed it manually. No harm, no foul it appears.That is a hell of a way to roll out 6.0, we are about 5 miles northwest of the epicenter and we did rock an roll. Maybe worse the the 89 quake, lost some things off the shelves and walls just got power back. Other than that all is well, no damage to the Tesla.
House is fine, but did lose 3 bottles of wine in my cellar. Oh well.
Jumpiest quake I was ever in. Felt like someone had grabbed the house and shook it up and down and sideways. Worse than Loma Prieta, but closer. Jumped up to check for gas leaks, water leaks, anything broken, but only found two pictures askew and the Tesla just fine. Power had resumed, charger back on. Having no wine cellar, etc., I lost nothing but a few minutes sleep.
As with most natural disasters, the news makes a lot more of it than most people experience. So far, no one was killed, and the triage at Queen of the Valley hospital was mostly fixing cuts and bruises. A few mobile homes burned, pipelines got broken, but safe water was always on. Very lucky for those living in Napa.
In American Canyon, most housing is newer, and I didn't hear of much damage. In Napa, the town is old. Many homes from WWII. The big buildings date from 1800s, and even retrofitted weren't up to the shaking. The biggest problem is that people forget and stack things too high, like in the garage, and it all falls down and goes boom. I chuckled at the news coverage: Picture after picture of broken windows, broken brickwork, broken roadways, broken bottles in the aisles, and under it, the tagline, "Breaking news..."
The pictures of the stores and markets - well, that was just mostly plastic bottles, etc. No loss. Since people think that wine and spirits simply must be sold in glass, well, that's what broke. Some people still think no loss, but I am sure not one winery or liquor store will go broke. All in all, a very easy natural disaster, early Sunday morning when most everyone is safe in bed.