Some Nuke Plants Still Have Y2K Bugs 154
Doug Muth writes "There is an
article in Wired about
30 nuclear power plants in the U.S. that still aren't Y2K compliant. The article goes on to explain how the feds have been trying to downplay the severity of the situation, but for some reason the initials TMI seem to come to mind... "
Re:In the words of Dogbert (Score:1)
Surely you mean a reboot.
Anyway, with a moderately well-designed plant, meltdowns are pretty unlikely. Gravity is Y2K-compliant (neutron absorbing control rods go down and curtail the reaction).
--
QDMerge [rmci.net] -- data + templates = documents.
Re:Gee I don't _really_ want to Terrify you...but (Score:1)
TMI? Did someone mention TMI ? (Score:1)
they now suggest we need to watch the cooling
towers at the nearby nulcear plant new years eve?
With all the new years celebration how will
we tell if the "melt down" sirens are going?
What about the Middletown airport (HIA) that
is close to TMI? What happens to the
planes flying over the cooling towers?
Maybe we should install one of those web cams
on our roof to let everyone watch as new years
rolls around...nah, they would probably say
we were terrorists...
IN all reality, I will bet that TMI is one of the safest
nuclear plants in the world, they have to be, because,
everyone always thinks of TMI whenever
they mention nuclear plant safety.
Re:Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:1)
The bottom line is even if they say they are Y2k compliant, and they've tested every scenario THEY can think of, generally mother nature or chaos or WHATEVER thinks of a new one.
Re:The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:1)
Windscale (the site became known as Sellafield) in Cumbria UK was caused by inadaquate instumentation of the core and an incomplete knowledge of the behaviour of irradiated graphite. (Weigner (sp?) energy was released). It was a reactor whose job was purely military.
I think the lesson for us here is the importance of the instrumentation - they knew they had a problem but not how bad it was.
Re:The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:1)
The motor computer(s) may have a sequence of
"raise this rod at time X, lower that rod at time Y" in order to accomodate changing load. Now an Y2K error reset the clock to 1900 and the motor computer figures "hey - it is 100 years and 0.003 sec till have to do this important stuff"
And all the reduntant computers agree on that...
Re:Why U.S. Plants are Safe (Score:1)
Re:Why U.S. Plants are Safe (Score:1)
only thing you have to cleanup afterwords is
a hundred thousand dead bodies. But the ten
or so people that MIGHT be lost due to reactor
problems and cleanup in a contained area is
something to be worried about?
-WW
--
Why are there so many Unix-using Star Trek fans?
When was the last time Picard said, "Computer, bring
Not exactly news (Score:1)
Re:The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:1)
Yes...but why would a computer that controls the location of a motor care what time or day it is? All it should care about is the position of the motor - is it up, 10% up, etc...
Re:Chernobyl (Score:1)
Don't panic have a beer (Score:1)
Also these things are very safe. When I saw a demo of the reactor I was at shut down it was a matter of 1 to 2 seconds.
As long as gravity doesn't reverse on New years day (and since MS doesn't own it I don't think it will) we have nothing to worry about.
Re:I talked to an expert about this (Score:1)
(*) Among the products of nuclear fission reactions are elements which are radiologically unstable; after they're produced they sit and bobble about for a bit and then decide "I'd be much happier if I had fewer neutrons", so they kick one out. The neutrons are called "delayed neutrons", the elements which produce them are called "precursors", and without them to take part in a reaction, we'd have to have humans with sub-millisecond reaction times to have nuclear power.
Why U.S. Plants are Safe (Score:1)
higher reaction rate --> higher core temperature
higher core temperature --> water bolis
water boils --> no moderation
no moderation --> lower reaction rate
lower reaction rate --> lower temperatures and reaction shuts down.
Note that control rods, which absorb neutrons, rendering them unable to be used to continue the chain reaction, are also inserted into the core, and reactors are also required to have three (3) INDEPENDENT means of replacing the cooling water in the core once the control rods are in the core.
In the case of a loss of on-site power, there are two (2) independent diesel generators that are required to come on-line in seven seconds, and to be able to power the site for forty-eight hours each. Also, the control rods in one type of reactor (PWR - Pressurized Water Reactor) are able to fall into the core under gravity alone in a loss of on-site power. The other kind of reactor in the U.S., BWRs (Boiling Water Reactors) use the diesel generators to drive their control rods up into the core.
As far as installing new fuel, this is only done while the reactor is shut down in the U.S., so a failure would have to include the reactor unexpectedly going critical with the control rods in place, etc.
TMI was a real wake-up call for the U.S. nuclear industry in terms of reactor design, safety systems, operator training, and computer modeling of accidents. The only was to run the reactors these days is literally safety first, otherwise the NRC will be on your @$$ so quickly it isn't funny. The Nuclear Power industry has the best safety record of any U.S. industry, and the only way that will continue is if people who operate and design the reactors continue to believe that accidents can happen if people aren't careful and attentive. Accidents will happen when the time comes that people think they can't, which is not the situation today.
Disclaimer: I am a Nuclear Engineering senior at Penn State, and welcome all e-mail in response to this at efm110@psu.edu
Re:The Location of one of those nuclear plants. (Score:1)
So we lose power (1st?) (Score:1)
Re:So we lose power .... Oooops! (Score:1)
-----------------------------------------------
Re:So we lose power (1st?) (Score:1)
Unfortunately that guy is Homer Simpson.
Netcraft reports this plant runs on... (Score:2)
yeah yeah okay... (Score:1)
call me ignorant... but who's TMI? (Score:1)
Re:call me ignorant... but who's TMI? (Score:1)
The poster probably means "Three Mile Island".
Re:So we lose power (1st?) (Score:2)
The article mentions that some of the remaining plants will have to shut down to finish their remaining remediation work. This suggests the possibility that it might not be a good thing to leave these plants running without the fixes in place.
Of course we know that no one would even dream of running a nuke plant in an unsafe manner.
I see this as a large problem. (Score:1)
Y2K is a minor issue in nuke plants (Score:1)
I was interested to see the Farley plant mentioned as one that is behind on the testing...it belongs to the Southern Company and is operated by its subsidiary Alabama Power. Given the recent PR campaign, I would've figured that they would get all the Y2K issues out of the way long before time was up...you really don't want to break your arm patting yourself on your back about what a good job you do, then have to own up to the public that they've been paying for power they didn't receive because the plant had to be shut down...
OK, so you pay based on the meter, but my point is still the same...
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
In the words of Dogbert (Score:1)
Re:So we lose power (1st?) (Score:2)
Re:I talked to an expert about this (Score:1)
Re:So we lose power .... Oooops! (Score:2)
The Location of one of those nuclear plants. (Score:1)
One of those plants that is not prepared is located in Bridgman Michigan.
Bridgman is about 60 miles south of Holland, MI
The home of Slashdot.
Re:What about the LA sewage plant failure? (Score:2)
The spring (Score:1)
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
How many rocket scientists we got!? (Score:1)
thanks.
France (Score:1)
youhou! France is first!
--
http://www.beroute.tzo.com
Scoop from someone who has worked on this stuff... (Score:1)
Nobody in the y2k testing teem ever encountered a significant problem with the software. We ran many tests--rolling over the machines to 2000, upgrade of all database and database components, and extensive testing of homebrew software. None of the core systems will even be affected. The only potential problem is with these external systems.
The thing to remember (at least for our nuc. plants) is that we have many failsafe plans. The plants are so government regulated you have to fill out paperwork to sneeze, and you can only do so in approved areas. If something goes wrong, the plant goes into a safe mode.
Don't be disapponted when nothing happens (at least in the nuc. plants) because of y2k.
Yeah but (Score:1)
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
Re:Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:1)
Re:Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:1)
The Fermi accident happened on October 5th, 1966. Just a little something to help with searches / put it in perspective.
Consider your position (Score:1)
2. if it was an anti-(whatever your OS is) book, you'd shout "FUD!" so loud that all of earth, heaven, and hell could hear
3. government doesn't subsidize nuclear power (not in the US)
4. FUD-mongers have caused the NRC to crack down on nuclear plants so hard that it takes a whole team of people and ream of paper to change a light bulb (OK, I'm exaggerating, but you get my point)
5. Other forms of energy require government regulation (coal, gas)
6. because of the regulatory nightmare, no one builds new plants--which is fine for the coal companies, the railraods, the miners union...but not for the miners, the atmosphere, or the earth's appearance
7. disposal of by-products from non-nuclear plants is massive--tons of coal ash every year...I don't know the current figure, but the estimate was that the entire waste disposal from US nuclear plants from the beginning of all US nuclear activities up until 1989--all of that waste--would fill one football field to a depth of 10 feet (as opposed to mountains of ash and soot and poisonous fumes)
Read a more reliable book, next time
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
I've heard of that book (Score:1)
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
Re:Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:1)
At least one of the dead men's heads and extremities had to be severed and buried as high level radioactive waste.
hate to post late but... (Score:1)
the confidence of everyone elses posts only serves to make me more uneasy.
Re:The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:1)
The possible problem, as with many failures, involves systems doing something outside its design limitations. Common embedded system boards are often off-the-shelf boards with custom code. Many of these boards (especially the ones that are built with a PC-like architecture) come with a (potentially noncompliant) real-time clock. This clock noodles along until rollover, whether or not that rollover actually coincides with 01/01/2000, at which point a noncompliant RTC returns an invalid response (if you're lucky) or does a convenient buffer overflow in a badly written BIOS. Presto, confused embedded system.
Re:So we lose power (1st?) (Score:1)
Too bad, but safety comes before profit...
Then you must not work for Florida Power. I can't believe that the NRC lets them keep their plant. Go to the St. Petersburg Times [sptimes.com] and search for "florida power crystal river" to see what I'm talking about.
They bringing in record profits while complaining that they can't afford to pay some outstanding fines. They are simultaneously lobbying (constantly) the Public Service Commission to increase the rates for residential customers. And they have the sporadic power flickers on perfectly clear days -- enough to reset the computer, but not enough to turn off the television.
I hate them.
Mike
--
Re:Why U.S. Plants are Safe (Score:1)
What many people overlook about the meltdown at TMI-2 is that in almost every instance where plant operators had a decision to make, they made what hindsight would show to be the wrong one -- and there was virtually no radiation released from the plant (some volatiles got out, which had they been concentrated in a single individual would have delivered about as much radiation dose as a single chest X-ray).
We learned a hell of a lot from TMI, and the most important thing is that the safety features _work_. The greatest loss was that of the multibillion-dollar plant. Most of the improvements made post-TMI have been along the lines of "OK, now that we know the safety features work, how can we save the plant itself in the event of an accident?"
The real bummer of the situation is that the nuclear power industry in the US effectively died with the double-whammy of TMI and Chernobyl. All that's left is to finish the operating lives and shut down the remaining plants (down to 103; there were 112 when I was in your shoes as a senior NucE student). Because people are afraid of safe reactor technology, we don't build new reactors -- which means that the even safer designs like the ABWR go unbuilt and old people roast in their apartments every summer.
Re:hate to post late but... (Score:1)
This is because you are scientifically ignorant. If someone asked where to look for the sunrise on 1/1/2000 and the mass responded "East" in a confident manner, would you begin to sweat?
Re:Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:2)
Re:Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:1)
http://oak.cats.ohiou.edu/~p iccard/entropy/perrow.html [ohiou.edu]
It's a review of the book Normal Accidents: Living With High-Risk Technologies by Charles Perrow. The bit about the Fermi incident is about halfway down the page.
--
Re:hate to post late but... (Score:1)
Re:Why U.S. Plants are Safe (Score:1)
Re:oh boy (lots of thoughts) (Score:1)
So congress passed the Price-Anderson Act, which grants blanket immunity to the power industry for nuclear accidents.
Civillian nuclear power wouldn't exist if the companies had to pay insurance premiums to operate the plants. (something people like to refer to as a free market) Thats how safe they are considered by insurance company actuaries. Of course, congress knows a lot more than the insurance industry. Or, they wanted more weapons grade plutonium and didn't care. Pick and choose which one you want to believe.
Re:Netcraft reports this plant runs on... (Score:1)
Of course, how many computers do you know that have been tested to be operational inside ovens, freezers, earthquake simulators, etc. Many safety systems are powered by relay logics (smart). Other times by redundant computer systems(not so smart).
Y2K isn't the worst thing, it's finding replacement parts. You can't just replace an entire system because you have thousands of operating years experience (each unit*#computers*plants*years). Would you be ready to trust your safety to something like a *NIX system??!!
Not quite (Score:1)
oh, and that doesn't even begin to address your NASA remark...AFAIK (unless you know something I don't) the most people NASA has ever lost at one time was 7--far from a thousand, let alone tens of thousands...now if you want to talk about gas/chemical/paper plant explosions, we have some ground to stand on...
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
Re:It can happen (Score:1)
Re:uuh.. so, where is they? (Score:1)
Insurance (Score:1)
Also, civilian energy-producing plants are not used to create plutonium for bombs, and never were. The military has enough of its own reactors for those purposes. The early nuclear power industry did receive quite considerable subsidies from the U.S. government, but those are comparable to the support that other renewable energy sources have been receiving for decades now, with far fewer results than nuclear power so far. I agree with the support of these renewables, just as I agree with the early support of renewable nuclear power, as a good use of tax monies, to "kickstart" a civilian industry.
Re:So we lose power (1st?) (Score:1)
You seem to be suggesting that we have 20-25% excess capacity, which is untrue. Depending on the time of year we are talking about, it is estimated for 1999 we have approximately 15% excess capacity during the middle of summer, and aprox. 25% during the middle of winter. So I believe some of us would be in the dark, if we were to take all the nuke plants out.
Besides, if SimCity is any indication, you don't want to be running your powerplants at 100% capacity for too long! :)
Anyway, as you've said, worst case, we won't have to power ALL of them down since some are already "compliant". I'm just trying to bring some real numbers to the table.
Try here: NERC [nerc.com]
Related: NASA (Score:1)
The only real nightmare on the year 2000 is that thousands of people are trying to have their children born on new years, and there will surely be several times more births than room/staff for them at the hospitals. Anyone stupid enough to try to have a baby in those circumstances should have been neutered years ago to improve the human race.
No need to fear (Score:1)
Besides the computers and circuits that control the power plant, there are several layers of physical protection.
Even if all the controlling power had been shut down for a reactor, the mechanical devices would shut it down.
Re:Netcraft reports this plant runs on... (Score:2)
Re:Why U.S. Plants are Safe (Score:1)
No. Every time we build a hydroelectric dam, we're betting tens of thousands of lives on our expectation that no major accident will occur. But modern reactors just aren't that dangerous, for all the reasons given in the earlier postings.
The worst conceivable accident related to energy production would be if the Folsom Dam (right above a heavily populated area) collapsed; that could easily kill over a hundred thousand people in a flash flood. Oil and gas refinery explosions kill at least hundreds (thousands?) of people every year, as do coal-mining accidents. But the worst conceivable accident in a U.S.-style nuclear plant would kill only tens of people, not tens of thousands. This is much less deadly than even the normal-case level of risk we accept in every other industry in the country.
Wow, slashdot leaps on the bandwagon (Score:1)
What could possibly be tied to dates in a nuclear power plant? Let's think about this. The most obvious is monitoring equipment... okay, so the logs show the wrong year on them. Whoever goes to read them and say "oh, nothing interesting happened" will be able to compensate for that.
Now, let's say that the system is date-controlled to automatically raise the output levels a bit around, say, christmas and thanksgiving. Okay, so they miss by a few days since the calendar doesn't quite line up. Or, if it's time sensitive, then the evening power boost comes at 9 PM because daylight savings time started on the wrong day.
Give me a break, critical systems in a nuclear power plant (in the US, anyway) are well constructed by people who have to answer to some of the most paranoid freaks in the world: the public. If Greenpeace wasn't down with your computer controlled nuclear plant, it wouldn't have been built.
Now that we've all taken a moment to recover from the initial shock of worrying about waking up on that fateful saturday with our house glowing, take a moment for a DEEP BREATH and a reality check. (Of course, we *will* all have to get up that saturday to go to work and try to find backup tapes so we can reinstall the systems that died overnight and we've called the manufacturer to dropship newer ones...)
-Chris
The world can't end on 1/1/2000. 1/6/2000, though is a Thursday... that's what we need to worry about.
OT, but not really -- my name (Score:1)
"Confutatis maledictis flammis acribus addictis..."
Yes, lines from Mozart's Requiem. (And I own the movie, so I won't debate it's merits.) This is also known as the "really cool tune" some ad guy from Madison Avenue put in the background of a Microsoft TV commercial a couple of years ago.
Where do *you* want to go today?
This sorta scares me (Score:1)
What they run on (Score:1)
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:2)
In theory, any nuclear reactor where the computers fail for whatever reason, should automatically set itself into a safe configuration.
In practice, as Chernobyl and (less spectacularly) Windscale have demonstrated, things are rarely that simple. Components do all sorts of exotic things, through bugs, inadequate maintenance, sloppy design work, etc.
Whilst meltdown is improbable, it is far from impossible. All it would take is for the computers to raise all the controlling rods, due to an error, and for the emergency shutdown to fail for any reason at all. (Spilt coffee shorting the switch'll do it.)
Much, much more probable, though, is for the generators to fail, and all the safeties to slam in, shutting the reactor down. It could take a long time to fix the Y2K fault, and even longer to restart the reactor. Reactors aren't particularly designed for prolonged shutdowns.
Another, much more probable fault is that any computer-controlled device used in installing new fuel in the reactor could fail, thus causing the reactor to simply burn up all it's fuel and stop. Again, it would take a while to fix the Y2K fault, refuel and restart the reactor.
The most probable fault of all is that nuclear reactor techs will be forced to stop playing minesweeper, and get back to work.
Re:I see this as a large problem. (Score:2)
uuh.. so, where is they? (Score:1)
.. though if a nearby plant went tragic, I could at least save on night lights and read by the glow of my fingernails.
-fester(ing)
Re:call me ignorant... but who's TMI? (Score:1)
Three Mile Island, an accident at a nuclear power plant and a media feeding frenzy (call me biased -- my Daddy was a nuclear physicist) happened sometime in the late 70s, I believe. I remember my dad discussing the media hype over dinner many, many times during the whole fiasco.
Feelin' kinda old, now.
Re:Netcraft reports this plant runs on... (Score:2)
Re:I see this as a large problem. (Score:1)
Not a big worry of mine..... (Score:1)
I'm not real worried about these reactors giving us problems here. Way to much regulation, to many trained people. Other countries, yes. But, I'm worried about other countries a lot anyhow.
BTW - TMI doesn't scare me a bit. It was relatively innocous, it just got a lotta press. You wanna be scared? Read about the Fermi accident outside of Detroit. I can guaran-damn-tee ya that if that had gone any farter, many, many people, including myself and CmdrTaco, wouldn't be here anymore.
Re:uuh.. so, where is they? (Score:1)
Re:So we lose power .... Oooops! (Score:2)
How many Y2K test plans included killing the power in the middle of the test? I would suspect that a lot of fringe problems might be uncovered if we actually do lose power during the rollover.
Re:I talked to an expert about this (Score:1)
Re:The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:1)
HOLY SHIT I WORSHIP YOU (Score:1)
Wow, you are awesome! Could you tell me how to remember things that happen(ed) 5 months from now? That is so cool.
Exactly! It would be a BAD time to lose power... (Score:2)
The article I read blamed the four million gallon sewage spill in Van Nuys on a power outage during a Y2K test of the system. I am hoping massive sewage spills aren't normal consequences of routine power outages!
Re:Gee I don't _really_ want to Terrify you...but (Score:1)
Re:hate to post late but... (Score:1)
Nuclear power is safe. The plants are designed with the full realization that people make mistakes, so the physical facilities better be able to compensate. It's _damned_ difficult to make a Very Bad Thing happen in a US nuclear power plant and you should be reassured by what you've read here today, not alarmed by the fact that the nukes among the
It's not a game -- but you are posting as though you think that nukes are somehow unaware of that fact. Believe me, we're very aware of it -- we spend our careers striving to get the odds of an accident down from one in a trillion to one in ten trillion, only to be told by people like you that our statements of confidence make you uneasy, that you worry about our cavalier attitude towards the bogeyman atom, that you want Zero Risk and won't settle for anything but.
Go back to watching "Dawson's Creek" and let the big people take care of the power, mmmkay?
Uhhhhh .... shutting down by hand is ... (Score:1)
Re:This sorta scares me (Score:1)
Re:hate to post late but... (Score:1)
Russia, however has already proven that to be false for them. And that was after they disabled one safety. What happens when Russia/Bolivia/Bum-Fuck Egypt loses all their safety systems. Third world countries can't always afford the physical barrier.
Your condescending and extremely insulting "PhD in nuclear engineering" attitude doesn't help either. You have to admit that when it comes to common knowledge and common sense, Americans are MORONS. You can tell the masses m&m's will kill them and sooner or later, everyone will be without the candy that melts in your mouth. If, instead of insulting people who don't know for sure, you politely explained that a 747 at 500mph couldn't knock down a nuke reactor, maybe people would learn and not be the paranoid freaks they are.
I can understand your frustrations though. People don't seem to understand that anything in this country that poses a threat is severely regulated and has triple redundancy in the safety systems. (I think I heard that a US plant has three times the safety systems as those in France.)
oh boy (lots of thoughts) (Score:1)
I don't know why reactors were still being built after all those accidents. It just defies logic. I don't think any other form of energy relies so heavily on government cash and regulation (tho I could be wrong on the cash part). It just boggles my mind, like the engineers in the 70s were still riding on the dreams of the 30s.
Oh no, no need to worry at all... (Score:1)
It can happen (Score:1)
As for the date stuff. Well a lot of things have dates programmed into them as to when they need to be replaced. This might stop working suddenly. Or at least that is one potential concern.
-cpd
I talked to an expert about this (Score:1)
It takes about 12-24 hours to bring it back online.
Re:call me ignorant... but who's TMI? (Score:1)
Re:So we lose power (1st?) (Score:1)
In addition - the article states that 73 of 103 plants have completed Y2K work on their systems. Of the remaining 30, only 6 will not be ready by the end of Sept.
My local utility has already moved the clock on all plant systems to 2027, so they will be operating next year. I may never get a bill, but I would not complain about that!
Chernobyl (Score:1)
Basically it was a preventible accident that resulted from very foolish, very preventable human acts (not computers or even poor design).
* Now for a little reactor-workings theory
The outermost part of the plant (at least in the US) is a concrete building, usually with metallic lining inside (e.g., lead). This part is designed to withstand a direct airplane crash....
Inside you have a reactor set into a depression with a minimum of two (usually three or more) water tanks to pump a moderator into the core. This "moderator" absorbs neutrons and performs two functions. First, it controls the amount of neutrons bouncing around in the reactor, preventing a runaway reaction. Second, it absorbs the heat from the reaction. Various moderators exist. The most popular is water (it's cheap
The reactor has a set of control rods made out of some neutron-absorbing material. These may be at the top or bottom of the reactor. If they are placed at the top, then the reactor can be shut down by gravity (this is becoming a popular way of doing things). Their purpose is to stop (or modify) the flow of neutrons. When the rods are fully inserted, the neutrons can't reach critical mass and start a reaction. When they are fully withdrawn, the reactor can boil madly. The rods have hard-wired electrical controls, so that they can be inserted quickly into the core if the reaction goes out of control.
The coolant/moderator material passes through a loop from the reactor into a heat exchanger. The liquid in the heat exchanger then passes to the turbine to generate power. This provides the power, but keeps the radioactivity inside the reactor.
The inside of the reactor contains a series of fuel bundles (square sheathes of fuel rods (IIRC, about 20 feet long)). Each bundle contains several rods, and each rod consists of uranium pellets about the size of your pinky finger. The bundles are arranged in a grid to fit inside the reactor. There is space between each bundle for the coolant/moderator to pass, and at several key points there are spaces for the control rods to slide in.
The interesting thing about this is that a lot of work goes into determining what mixture of fuel goes where in the core, and how far the rods should be pulled and when, so as to maximize the benefit of the fuel and minimize safety issues. I've seen the work involved first-hand...it's months of time and lots of double- and triple-checking before a fuel plan is implemented.
I'm not worried about it. Usually fears that a plant will meltdown are based on ignorance and propaganda. As long as you know how the system works, and why, you know why there won't be a problem
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
y2k Nuclear Testing (Score:1)
"Excellent! What does it say?"
"Run for your lives."
IIRC it was unit 2 (Score:1)
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
Re:Gee I don't _really_ want to Terrify you...but (Score:1)
Re:Gee I don't _really_ want to Terrify you...but (Score:1)
A bit late, but... (Score:1)
Re:Hell on earth, not this year! (Score:1)
I was there. (TMI) (Score:1)
I'm supposed to be counting my xrays for radiation overdose - I had 8 today. Oops.
I recognize the Amadeus quote above.
Good movie, but not sure it belongs on the AFI's top 100 movies list.
Re:The control desk computers aren't the worry. (Score:1)
Hmmm, yeah, but at Chernobyl safety systems (including the flux equalizing rod group's control computer) were deactivatd. Also, by design the Chernobyl reactor type actually has an upsurge in power before shutting down during an emergency rod insertion. Also, in the Chernobyl design rising water temperatures causing reaction rates to rise, not fall as in most US reactors (most pressurized water reactors use coolant density to control reaction rates...the denser the water the more neutrons bounced back into the fuel...Chernobyl's design was 180 degrees from this). I know of no reactor in the West that could duplicate Chernobyl...there were just too many f****d up design choices there.
I'm not familiary enough with Windscale (unless I know it by another name) to comment.
Another, much more probable fault is that any computer-controlled device used in installing new fuel in the reactor could fail, thus causing the reactor to simply burn up all it's fuel and stop. Again, it would take a while to fix the Y2K fault, refuel and restart the reactor.
Do we have at power refueling in the West? I thought this was mainly a Soviet phenomena. Fueling at power does all kinds of weird things to power and neutron distribution that makes it hard to control. You must have computerized controls in a large reactor like that, whereas you can allow physics to do a lot for you if you refuel the whole thing at end of core life.
Harmast
yeah ;) (Score:1)
Who am I?
Why am here?
Where is the chocolate?
The real problems on Jan 1,2000 (Score:1)
So what to do? Have complete financial records, backups, expect the shit to hit the fan. But don't think soceity will collapse.