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Electricity theft bleeds power grid dry, officials say
ABCNews15 ^ | AP

Posted on 01/24/2005 1:13:36 PM PST by hsmomx3

PHOENIX (AP) -- They look like cobwebs or huge balls of spaghetti hanging from electric poles across Mexico, gigantic clusters of illegal electric lines known as diablitos, or "little devils."

Dentist Benjamin Rodriguez has one hanging outside his window in the Xochimilco neighborhood of Mexico City. Like an evil parasite, it makes his lights flicker and stops his dental drill. Occasionally, the transformer across the street explodes.

"Six or seven times a year, the power just goes out completely," Rodriguez said.

"You call the power company and they come and cut all the illegal lines and the next day they're back up."

Mexico's Energy Department says electricity thieves are bleeding the country's power grid dry, causing millions of dollars of losses, starting fires and crippling the country's efforts to modernize.

Now the government has launched a crackdown on the thieves, installing tamper-proof meters and running ads urging people to report theft.

"To the devil with diablitos!" say TV commercials as cartoon devils with electrical cords for tails prowl the streets of a darkened neighborhood.

In central Mexico alone, the amount of electricity lost, mainly through diablitos, rose 8.7 percent from September 2003 to September 2004, according to Luis de Pablo, director of Central Light and Power. In the rest of the country, it rose 1.3 percent.

In Mexico state, where squatters have built entire cities around the capital, about 300,000 houses are using stolen power, according to the state Electrification Board.

That's equivalent to a city the size of Tucson, and the figure doesn't count the thousands of diablitos serving taco stands, CD sellers and other street vendors.

"It really hurts us, because that money could be going into infrastructure," said Gerardo Lerma, a spokesman for Central Light and Power.

Diablitos were cited as the possible cause of a fire that swept through a shantytown in Juarez in 2003, killing four women, and one that destroyed a public market in Durango in May. On Dec. 2, two firefighters were injured battling a blaze caused by a diablito at a recycling warehouse in the Mexico City suburb of San Juan Tlihuaca.

The government launched its campaign against diablitos in 2003, but honest electricity customers say it has not gone far enough. On Oct. 14, customers from Mexico state protested in front of Central Light and Power, demanding that the company take action against theft, which is inflating their electricity bills.

The illegal lines are an epidemic in low-income places like Xochimilco. Around the central plaza, street vendors have broken open ornamental lampposts and strung lines to their stands. Other lines disappear into homes.

Thieves around the plaza refused to give their names. But many said they have to use the diablitos because the government is slow to install new lines to homes and has only a few electrical outlets for street vendors.

In the past two years, Central Light and Power has installed 500,000 tamper-proof meters and 840 miles of new cable with an outer coating meant to foil electricity thieves, Lerma said.

It has also gotten 250,000 thieves to become paying customers by installing new lines to their homes, he said. Electricity theft is a federal crime but most offenders get off with a warning because overworked prosecutors can't handle the extra cases, officials say.

There is one electric meter on the pole outside the La Vega shoe store. It's connected to outlets used by four sidewalk stands, including that of video-game seller Juan Loiza.

"We use the meter and share the bill, but look at this," he said, pointing at 10 other electric lines that climb the pole like vines. "Who else is going to pay when they can just put up a line?"


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; US: Arizona
KEYWORDS: electricity; electricpower; energy; mexico; powergrid; thirdworld
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Comment #41 Removed by Moderator

To: Sergio

We all know that these people use underground tunnels that they build to smuggle people and drugs into our country. I can just see them splicing thru an underground cable.


42 posted on 01/24/2005 2:32:17 PM PST by hsmomx3 (GO STEELERS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
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To: unlearner
How does a Tesla coil work? I have always been curious but never took the time to learn how to build one.

It's just a high frequency step up transformer. The spark gap, capacitor and primary form a resonant circuit. The large secondary provides the step up. It is common to excite the resonant primary with something like a neon transformer.

43 posted on 01/24/2005 2:38:07 PM PST by Myrddin
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To: cyborg
If those things work, then why aren't we using them?

Actually they are similar to the high voltage circuit (flyback transformer) in a TV. The big difference is a true tesla coil uses a spark gap where your TV does not.

44 posted on 01/24/2005 2:39:24 PM PST by RadioAstronomer
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To: DannyTN

That's when you were young and dumb, huh? Had you said what a wonderful country is she probably would have married you on Sunday morning.


45 posted on 01/24/2005 2:39:49 PM PST by B4Ranch (Don't remain seated until this ride comes to a full and complete stop! We're going the wrong way!)
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To: RadioAstronomer

Shouldn't we be looking more into these things so we can be less dependent on oil? Just wondering aloud. Don't mind me *LOL*


46 posted on 01/24/2005 2:40:31 PM PST by cyborg
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To: Myrddin

BTW, very nice coil you described. :-)


47 posted on 01/24/2005 2:41:45 PM PST by RadioAstronomer
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

What is that supposed to mean?


48 posted on 01/24/2005 2:43:41 PM PST by justshutupandtakeit (Public Enemy #1, the RATmedia.)
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To: cyborg

People have been building these for years. Unfortunately you cannot get something from nothing. (At least at this level of physics :-))

Takes more power to run than you can "reap". :-)


49 posted on 01/24/2005 2:45:36 PM PST by RadioAstronomer
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To: hsmomx3
Many of you seem to think that it is the peon stealing from the electric collectif and that new technical modifications would solve the problem.

What is happening is that the peons are paying for their stolen electricty but not paying the electric company. It is electric company and government employees who are setting up the power taps and charging the users for doing so. They rationalize that the power comes from the public entity and they can take it and sell it.

Just check your local Mexican landscapping crews. They all think it is perfectly acceptable in the US to blow leaves out into the street because the street is a public asset.

Here, the real thieves are electric company employees and no one is going to stop them because they are related to company officials and government folks and kick back to them a portion of the peons' pesos.

50 posted on 01/24/2005 2:50:31 PM PST by Tacis (Democrats! - When You Need America Blamed Or A Pool Peed In!!)
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To: Myrddin

I should probably read up before asking too many questions (at risk of sounding completely ignorant), but I am curious about what causes the effect.

Do the Tesla coils use a single, constant source of alternating current?


51 posted on 01/24/2005 2:52:31 PM PST by unlearner
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To: Floyd R Turbo

I ought to be going back to that site soon. Wanna tag along?


52 posted on 01/24/2005 2:54:39 PM PST by Professional Engineer (I've been divided by zero.)
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To: bowzer313

They are so used to people giving them fish instead of showing them how to fish.


53 posted on 01/24/2005 2:54:53 PM PST by ßuddaßudd (7 days - 7 ways (but you must follow the instructions carefully))
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To: Myrddin; Jim Robinson
My Tesla coil was more conservative. The secondary was a 2 inch diameter, 30 inch long mailing tube. I spent 7 hours winding the secondary with 36 gauge magnet wire. It looked like smooth copper foil. The capacitor was built with a stack of 12" mirror tiles. Spark gap with 10d nails. Primary with some 12 gauge wire stripped from spare Romex. A 15,000 volt neon transformer was used to excite the primary. I powered it up inside an 8 X 8 foot bedroom at a friend's house. The snaky violet discharges went all the way to the walls. After days of work, the total run time was under 5 minutes. Too much RFI.

You need to contact JimRob and volunteer for the ZOT team!

54 posted on 01/24/2005 2:59:22 PM PST by TheRightGuy (ERROR CODE 018974523: Random Tagline Compiler Failure)
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To: hsmomx3

This is why many Freepers idea of an electric fence is doomed. There would be extension cords running all the way to Mexico City.


55 posted on 01/24/2005 3:02:11 PM PST by usurper (Correct spelling is overrated)
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To: usurper

Leave 'em alone...they're only stealing the electricity that Americans won't.


56 posted on 01/24/2005 3:08:57 PM PST by wingnut1971
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To: hsmomx3

The power company should send an announcement to all paying customers that on a specified day and time they are to disconnnect from the grid for 5 minutes. When the time comes, the power company should up the voltage going through their lines by 50%. That will fry every appliance still attached to the grid. If the power thieves have no more appliances, they won't need to steal the juice.


57 posted on 01/24/2005 3:09:51 PM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (All I ask from livin' is to have no chains on me. All I ask from dyin' is to go naturally.)
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To: newgeezer

They need more windmills.


58 posted on 01/24/2005 3:17:21 PM PST by biblewonk (Neither was the man created for woman but the woman for the man.)
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To: unlearner

References concerning building Tesla coils

http://205.243.100.155/frames/build1.html


59 posted on 01/24/2005 3:24:55 PM PST by steve86
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To: B4Ranch

Yep, Insulting the girl's country isn't exactly out of the pages of Andrew Carnegie.


60 posted on 01/24/2005 3:53:30 PM PST by DannyTN
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