Kirin beer factory smashed...


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Fullback wrote:See? I told you so on page 100.
You can throw all the red snot you want (like you've done), but it doesn't change the fact that I spent more time in the power industry than some of you have been alive.
This site should change its name to fuckedintheheadgaijin.com. Some of you are truly ignorant.
You sound really familiar.Fullback wrote:See? I told you so on page 100.
You can throw all the red snot you want (like you've done), but it doesn't change the fact that I spent more time in the power industry than some of you have been alive.
This site should change its name to fuckedintheheadgaijin.com. Some of you are truly ignorant.
Tsuru wrote:You sound really familiar.
canman wrote:On a side note, I was supposed to fly to Canada on Tuesday, but they still don't know when the Shinkansen will start running and all the flights out of Misawa are booked. Do you think Air Canada will allow me to cancel or rebook later? I called there Japanese site and it says that Sunday is a holiday, I called the international number and was told I had to wait 1.5 hours to talk to a customer rep.
FG Lurker wrote:There are two sides to the nuclear discussion for sure.
On one hand there's a guy here (Fullback) who claims to have knowledge but of course there is no way to know that for sure. On the Internet "everyone's an expert" as they say. (I think it is likely he knows what he's talking about but that's just my opinion.)
On the other hand there are a lot of people who are spouting crap and seem to be near panic when the information we have currently does not warrant such a level of panic.
Taro Toporific wrote:NHK TV is saying that rolling blackouts will start here in Tokyo tomorrow in order to deal with the increased needs for power for the start of business Monday.
Tsuru wrote:For some great nuclear punditry I've been following this guy for about a day now... he knows his shit and seems to have the pulse of the men, so to say.
http://twitter.com/arclight
Coligny wrote:You forgot the 3rd side... ---Chernobyl... Geeezzzz... not this shit again...---
(not the technicalities of Chernobyl, the global context, Nuke plant goes bad, spill, no spill ?)
Coligny wrote:HOW ON EARTH someone thought it was a good idea to put a plant right by the seaside, at sea level, without even the slightest mudpile to protect it from big tides. It's not a case of "after a problem occurs it's easy to point fingers" it's more a case of "the stupid was strong with this one".
canman wrote:On a side note, I was supposed to fly to Canada on Tuesday, but they still don't know when the Shinkansen will start running and all the flights out of Misawa are booked. Do you think Air Canada will allow me to cancel or rebook later? I called there Japanese site and it says that Sunday is a holiday, I called the international number and was told I had to wait 1.5 hours to talk to a customer rep.
FG Lurker wrote:Therefore the real issue is not if there has been a meltdown or not but whether the containment structure is functioning as designed. If the core (melted or otherwise) is still contained then the design has been successful and we are not facing a nuclear disaster. In this case the damage to the environment is almost certainly less than the pollution produced by that refinery fire in Chiba.
So, which is the safer technology? Considering how close those reactors were to the quake and that they took a direct hit from the tsunami, vs the Chiba refinery which was a long way from the quake and had no (or nearly no) tsunami issues...
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Will you even be able to get out Tuesday? Yesterday I met a guy who was on his way to Haneda when the quake struck. He said he can't get a flight out till Wednesday. He was here on a business trip and lives in Hong Kong.
FYI, as far as I know airline carriers DON'T let you reschedule flights that are canceled due to an Act of God. I'm not sure which flights fall into this catergory but my friend's friend got stuck in Tokyo this weekend. He was transferring from a domestic flight to an international one in Narita to go back to the US. The Narita flight was cancled and he would have had to buy a new ticket if he wanted to go to the US. He can't afford that so he's flying back home on a domestic flight tonight. He had to pay for that return trip too and got no money back for the canceled flights.
A friend of mine had his flight in the US canceled due to sever storms last year. It was the same deal. He couldn't depart till the next day, got not refund on his canceled ticket and had to buy a new one if he wanted to fly out the following day.
FG Lurker wrote:Nope, didn't forget that. That goes into the "unreasonable panic" category. Chernobyl was designed with pretty much no thought to safety or the environment. Not too surprising considering the designers...
Perhaps the immediate supply if unlimited cooling (water) was a consideration?
As someone else already said, when you design something for a 1 in 100 years event and you get a 1 in 1000 years event you're going to have problems. I'd say that so far things have gone remarkably well.
Coligny wrote:As I told you, I'm not discussing the technicalities. Just the fact that... plant goes bad, what to expect of the spill and official communications. The fact that it can't go as bad as Tchernobyl don't mean it will only spill unicorns farting rainbows.
Coligny wrote:For the position of the plant... Tsunami are not a 1 in 100 years event...
Coligny wrote:It's purposely put at sea level. 500m/ 1km more south on the small hill you got a position that could have been protected, more easily.
Coligny wrote:Aboot the 1 in 100 year remark... It's true for regular buildings, but not an excuse to go that reckless for something that is by itself a bit touchy.
FG Lurker wrote:We've just gone through an m9.0 quake. That's ~1000x more powerful than a 7.0 quake. If the containment holds I think Japan has done an awesome job.
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