Day 168 - 03 Oct 95 - Page 37


     
     1        A.  They would generally be about five pages.
     2
     3   MR. MORRIS:  Let me see if there is anything else -- the grills,
     4        if the RCD system trips out, all the grills become
     5        unusable, do they, for the meat?
     6        A.  It would depend which part of the RCD system -- if the
     7        part of the RCD system was specifically covering the grills
     8        tripped out, then the grills would be inoperable, yes.
     9
    10   Q.   So no-one would be able to get a hamburger, basically?
    11        A.  You cannot get a hamburger, that is right.
    12
    13   Q.   Which is the most popular item, basically?
    14        A.  Yes, that is right.
    15
    16   Q.   When it did trip out would that be in periods of high
    17        electric demands?
    18        A.  It could be -----
    19
    20   Q.   When did it tend to happen?
    21        A.  It tended to happen, to be honest, in the mornings
    22        rather than in the afternoons because you had all your
    23        equipment on and you were firing up ready for the afternoon
    24        rush.  It was less likely to happen over lunch time.
    25
    26   Q.   So what do you mean, it happens just before lunch time?
    27        A.  No, well, it would happen generally, if it was going to
    28        happen, it would happen in the morning, because things like
    29        the ice machine which you would not have on over lunch
    30        time, you would have on in the mornings, so the demand
    31        would actually be greater in the morning than it would be
    32        in the afternoon.
    33
    34   Q.   That would tend to be a Saturday, would it?
    35        A.  No, it would be -- it would be any time the week that
    36        they happen to trip out.  The problem was not with the
    37        demand, the problem was with the siting of the boxes to be
    38         -- the first problem.
    39
    40   Q.   Sorry, the siting of the?
    41        A.  The siting of the boxes and the electrical control
    42        boxes and where they sited the RCDs.  So they resited them
    43        and then they have re-routed and they eventually put in a
    44        larger fuse, I think, in the end but ......
    45
    46   Q.   Yes, but what I am saying is that it happened at times when
    47        there was a higher electrical demand for whatever reason?
    48        A.  It could do, yes.
    49
    50   Q.   But that was generally the time it happened? 
    51        A.  It was generally the time that it happened, yes, but it 
    52        generally had not happened ----- 
    53
    54   Q.   When there was nothing hardly going on, it did not happen?
    55        A.  It did not happen in the middle of the night when there
    56        was no-one there, no.
    57
    58   Q.   The only way to get the grills going again once they had
    59        tripped out would be to remove the trip switch?
    60        A.  No.  It would be to -- you reset -- you could reset the

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