minimac wrote:
Alfa- Apparently they didn't teach reading comprehension when you studied the nuclear industry. Re read my post. I didn't say steam was hydrogen. I didn't say U- 235 was being released.I didn't say the vessel blew up. There's quite a difference between the containment building and the containment vessel. Hydrogen and oxygen blow up real good-ask the captain of the Hidenburg. And a "fuel meltdown" takes place far below 3000C (C=Celsius--can anyone even measure that much?) You may have faith in the engineering. You are not exactly unbiased. I have been a proponent of nuclear power and make my living in it. But I know when I have been lied to by utilities( Davis Besse, Braidwood, Vermont Yankee), and the NRC(TMI, San Onofre). Shoot me for being a skeptic. I know what a 40 year old reactor vessel looks like. I'm working one right now. So don't presume I'm making things up. BTW, Japan just announced that rods are not only damaged but are approximately 1/2 exposed, and are evacuating an even larger area. And that's after all the PHDs and Engineers said all's safe and there is no threat
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As far as TMI:
"On March 28, 1979, there was a cooling system malfunction that caused a partial melt-down of the reactor core. This loss of coolant accident resulted in the release of a significant amount of radioactivity, estimated at 43,000 curies (1.59 PBq) of radioactive krypton gas, but less than 20 curies (740 GBq) of the especially hazardous iodine-131, into the surrounding environment."
Quoted for truth. now where's my tinfoil hat?
So, since you are such an expert, the whole alamist thing about the china syndrome and a chernoble like disater must have been a joke, right? Since neither will happen.
Rod damage takes place at 2200C, yes, but the fuel cermatic is 3000C. But you know that already....
So if you were not implying that u235 is being released, why did you bring it up with the alarming sentace about radioactive steam? You should know that u235 won't get carried out in the steam. Why bring up that hydrogen is radioative- you fully know that the half life is very short. you don't even mention the cesium and iodine that is being released in your previous post- but you must know about that, too- being a 30 year expert in the field.
Funny how you say that the Hindenburg exploded- it didn't. It burnt. BIG difference. HUGE difference. Yes, H2 burns well. Can run a car off of it. But even if it did explode, it does not have the energy to rupture one of those tanks. It's why the tanks are designed that way- but you should know that already- since you know that multiple redundancy is built into everything. The H2 is burning quite quickly- but it's not exploding.
You presume a Chernobyl. How is that not making things up? You know that there's no graphite present to catch on fire to take various radioative materials along with the soot. The only thing that's causing the fires is H2- you already know there's nothing else flamable, except furniture, in a boiling reactor. And for sure, nothing to maintain a Chernobyl fire.
You presume China Syndrome. Again, how is that not making things up? You know that both TMI and LOFT didn't show that happening, and even if it did, there are multiple containment systems to prevent that from happening. But you know that already, too....
Maybe I'm trying to figure out how the TMI release of significant radiation led to how many deaths, again? And how that release corresponds to a China Syndrome or Chernobyl. IIRC, nobody died at TMI. The only deaths in the US caused by a nuclear reactor were in the Idaho desert during some experimentation on a mobile army power unit, and even that has some back mystery behind it.
I also pointed out that there still stands a good chance of radioactive release. But, in the scheme of things, being crass to the workers who are working on it, they are small potatos compared to the rest of the damage.
None the less, lets say that your worst fears come true. That still pales in comparison to what happened Friday. Can we at least not forget that?