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8.8 Magnitude Earthquake hit Japan

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  • Sgt Beavis
    replied
    Originally posted by stevo View Post
    From what I understand is that they are running a new power cable in to attempt to power up the pumps, but that might be a moot point if the equipment is damaged beyond repair. I know I'd hate to be the person that has to attempt to repair the equipment.

    Stevo

    The part damaged beyond repair is the core itself. However it is believed that the main cooling system is fine, it just has no power. It is reported that restoring power "should" finally calm the situation.

    Of course they then have a huge mess to deal with...

    Leave a comment:


  • mstng86
    replied
    Liquid nitrogen?

    Leave a comment:


  • stevo
    replied
    Originally posted by Sean88gt View Post
    Why don't they just poor ice on them?
    I think that might be the current plan, let the snow cool them off.

    Stevo

    Leave a comment:


  • Sean88gt
    replied
    Why don't they just poor ice on them?

    Leave a comment:


  • stevo
    replied
    Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
    Right, I know the salt water ruined them forever, but they still have to keep the rods cooled down for years, from what I understand.
    From what I understand is that they are running a new power cable in to attempt to power up the pumps, but that might be a moot point if the equipment is damaged beyond repair. I know I'd hate to be the person that has to attempt to repair the equipment.

    Stevo

    Leave a comment:


  • mstng86
    replied
    Originally posted by stevo View Post
    Pumping salt water in them destroyed any chance of them ever working again, if that is what you are asking.

    Also, more bad news is coming in with the announcement that the pool of water covering the spent fuel rods has evaporated and radiation is spreading. This shit is only going to get worse.

    Stevo
    Right, I know the salt water ruined them forever, but they still have to keep the rods cooled down for years, from what I understand.

    Leave a comment:


  • stevo
    replied
    Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
    Concerning the whole nuclear plant crisis. There are about 180 workers that went back in today to cool down the reactors.

    OK, lets say they get them cooled down, has anyone heard of the long term plan? Are they working on getting the generators going along with cooling down the reactors. I have not heard anything about repairing the water system or anything like that.
    Pumping salt water in them destroyed any chance of them ever working again, if that is what you are asking.

    Also, more bad news is coming in with the announcement that the pool of water covering the spent fuel rods has evaporated and radiation is spreading. This shit is only going to get worse.

    Stevo

    Leave a comment:


  • mstng86
    replied
    Concerning the whole nuclear plant crisis. There are about 180 workers that went back in today to cool down the reactors.

    OK, lets say they get them cooled down, has anyone heard of the long term plan? Are they working on getting the generators going along with cooling down the reactors. I have not heard anything about repairing the water system or anything like that.

    Are the Japanese that are getting out of the country right now going to be accepted back. I mean, yes there status will still be the same, but socially how are people going to look at these people that ran away from this whole situation when they return?

    Leave a comment:


  • Skidmark
    replied

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  • mstng86
    replied
    A nice story in the whole mess.

    Miracles in Japan: Four-Month Old Baby, 70-Year Old Woman Found Alive

    ShareretweetEmailPrintBy WILLIAM LEE ADAMS William Lee Adams – Tue Mar 15, 7:20 pm ET
    Amid the silent corpses a baby cried out - and Japan met its tiniest miracle.

    On March 14 soldiers from the Japanese Defense Force were going door-to-door, pulling bodies from homes flattened by the earthquake and tsunami in Ishinomaki City, a coastal town northeast of Senda. More accustomed to the crunching of rubble and the sloshing of mud than to the sound of life, they dismissed the baby's cry as a mistake. Until they heard it again. (See 7 ways to help earthquake and tsunami victims in Japan.)

    They made their way to the pile of debris, and carefully removed fragments of wood and slate, shattered glass and rock. And then they saw her: a four-month old baby girl in a pink woolen bear suit.

    The tidal wave literally swept the unnamed girl away from her parents' arms when it hit their home on March 11. Since then her parents - both of whom survived the disaster - have taken refuge in their wrecked house, and worried that their little girl was dead. Soldiers managed to reunite the baby with her overjoyed father shortly after the rescue.

    "Her discovery has put a new energy into the search," a civil defense official told a local news crew. "We will listen, look and dig with even more diligence after this." Ahead of the baby's rescue, officials reported finding at least 2,000 bodies washed up on the shoreline of Miyagi prefecture. How the child survived drowning - or being crushed by fallen trees and houses - remains a mystery. (See pictures of the calamity of Japan's quake.)

    In a nation short on good news, other rescues have buoyed morale, too. In Iwate prefecture, northeastern Japan, the devastating tidal wave swept away an elderly woman along with her entire house - but it couldn't extinguish her will to live.

    Rescuers found the 70-year-old alive inside her home on March 15, four days after the black tidal wave wiped out much of the region. Osaka fire department spokesman Yuko Kotani told the Associated Press the woman is now receiving treatment in a local hospital. She is conscious but suffering from hypothermia. (See how to tend to Japan's psychological scars.)

    Elsewhere, 60-year old Hiromitsu Shinkawa survived two days at sea by clinging on to his floating rooftop. He was discovered 10 miles off the Japanese coastline. "Several helicopters and ships passed but none of them noticed me," he said after his March 13 rescue. "I thought that was going to be the last day of my life." (via Daily Mail)

    Leave a comment:


  • Strychnine
    replied
    Originally posted by stevo View Post
    Does this mean they are having issues determining the actual levels of radiation around the area?



    Stevo
    They have meters on site for rad levels. They are without a forecasting tool though, that helps determine where the prevailing winds would take any release.

    Example: weatherman on tv loses his NOAA feed to predict weather for the week, but he can still get a call from someone outside to find out if it's raining or not.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sgt Beavis
    replied
    Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
    I think another quake just happened.





    edit: possible delay in KHK feed?
    There was a 6.0 just a stones throw off the coast of Chiba...


    The scary thing is that there are THREE hospitals within a few kilometers of the epicenter.

    Leave a comment:


  • stevo
    replied
    Does this mean they are having issues determining the actual levels of radiation around the area?

    Radioactivity forecast system down

    A computer system that forecasts the spread of radioactivity has not been working due to malfunctioning monitoring posts around a troubled nuclear power plant in quake-hit Fukushima Prefecture.

    The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency says it does not know when the system will be back in operation.

    The system, called SPEEDI, predicts how radioactive substances will spread in case of radiation leakage from nuclear power plants, based on measurements taken at various locations, prevailing winds and other weather conditions.

    SPEEDI data are intended to be used to draw up evacuation plans for residents around power plants in case of accidents.

    The system is monitored at government offices, including the industry ministry and the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency in Tokyo.

    Friday's earthquake caused power outages around the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

    The agency says it cannot expect the SPEEDI system to function fully, since many monitoring posts are not operating due to power outages.

    Wednesday, March 16, 2011 10:25 +0900 (JST)
    Stevo

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  • 78X
    replied
    Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
    that link should be live
    yea i meant to quote Stevo

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  • Strychnine
    replied
    Originally posted by 78X View Post
    watch NHK livestream
    that link should be live

    Leave a comment:

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