Это видео недоступно.
Сожалеем об этом.

Inside Chernobyl ЧАЭС 2015 - 29th anniversary of the Чернобыль disaster

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 апр 2015
  • 29 years ago, the Chernobyl nuclear accident happened. today, we'll walk inside and document what the reactor buildings look like in 2015.
    besides seeing the control room and golden corridor - as an example of many human tragedies, we will go to the circulation pumps, where Valery Khodemtchuk remains buried beneath the debris of the explosion.
    but you might be surprised - there's a lot of people working in the nuclear power plant now, even in the control rooms...

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @unho1ywoodca1ifornication77
    @unho1ywoodca1ifornication77 8 лет назад +636

    whoever is in charge of washing the floors is doing the best job there

    • @funkyzone431
      @funkyzone431 5 лет назад +9

      No shit. You can skate there.

    • @johncoolberg
      @johncoolberg 5 лет назад +25

      We need three volunteers to go to reactor four and mop the floors!

    • @corazoncubano5372
      @corazoncubano5372 5 лет назад +14

      @@johncoolberg And our "volunteers" for today will be .... Svetlana Trotsky, Dmitri Dogoleff, Anna Sobieski, and Teodore Ivanoff. Lets thank our comrades for forgoing a lifetime with their families to do "volunteer" work.

    • @CaptainCalculus
      @CaptainCalculus 5 лет назад +3

      I think dirty windows are the least of their problems

    • @qwicy
      @qwicy 5 лет назад

      you'll notice that they're wearing clean suits in there - no need to clean the floor...

  • @JckSwan
    @JckSwan 5 лет назад +235

    Disaster aside, I'm kind of in awe that people can build such things. The scale and complexity of the site is incredible.

    • @SWENWAR
      @SWENWAR 5 лет назад +4

      You're reading my mind.

    • @SWENWAR
      @SWENWAR 5 лет назад +16

      @JAffacakeSON BLAHA I've studied nuclear energy at the university and we've studied about all kind of reactors, including RBMK. It's an impressive technology. It has it's flaws, but if it's operated properly, it works very well. They are good reactors.

    • @cherylmburton5577
      @cherylmburton5577 5 лет назад +4

      Satan made them go way ahead of themselves. He appealed to their egos, which are the same in humans of all ethnic groups. We're all the same.

    • @851995STARGATE
      @851995STARGATE 5 лет назад +6

      @@cherylmburton5577 go get help

    • @Youre_Right
      @Youre_Right 5 лет назад +4

      SWENWAR They are cheaply made by cutting out safety measures that would have totally prevented the explosion. I wouldn’t use good as a way to describe them.

  • @ilikehumans1096
    @ilikehumans1096 5 лет назад +21

    I was born in Moscow in 1982, I was 4 years old when the accident happened. As a child I remember hearing terrifying rumors and ever since I've been afraid of this place. Now that I find more about it and the details of what actually happened my fear has turned into curiosity. This area is absolutely fascinating.

  • @bionerd23
    @bionerd23  9 лет назад +70

    photos of the inside Chernobyl tour here: www.flickr.com/photos/bionerd

    • @NikitaZhvansky
      @NikitaZhvansky 9 лет назад +1

      bionerd23 Why you dont use google map for showing your location?

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +4

      Nikita Zhvan copyright issues, google would give me a really good hard beating for that.

    • @NikitaZhvansky
      @NikitaZhvansky 9 лет назад

      ah lol

    • @NinoJoel
      @NinoJoel 9 лет назад

      Warum arbeiten so viele noch im reaktor Gebäude obwohl keine brenstäbe mehr drinnen sind ?
      Oder verwechsele ich da was.

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +4

      Nino Joel insbesondere rueckbauarbeiten, aber auch messungen. aber eben auch vorbereitungen fuer das new safe confinement. ist ja nicht so, als wuerde man da einfach den deckel drauf machen und es vergessen. dadrunter geht die arbeit dann weiter, fuer jahrzehnte. aber das erzaehle ich im naechsten video noch genauer...

  • @CB-RADIO-UK
    @CB-RADIO-UK 8 лет назад +414

    I never realised that they kept the other reactor working after the accident. I thought the whole place was cleared.

    • @davidhanak3240
      @davidhanak3240 8 лет назад +4

      same

    • @C0LS0N
      @C0LS0N 8 лет назад +86

      +Valeria Carreon all reactors shut down in 2000

    • @TheSeanUhTron
      @TheSeanUhTron 7 лет назад +5

      May as well use up the fuel in the good reactors, as well as keep it monitored to prevent the disaster from getting worse.

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 7 лет назад +52

      The station still operates as a standard power plant, but not a nuclear power plant. All remaining reactors were decommissioned in 2000.

    • @valerie80yearsago90
      @valerie80yearsago90 7 лет назад +5

      DEATHROW ELITE I genuinely wonder/hope I was being sarcastic when I asked that. If not, I don't know what the hell was going through my mind when asking that.

  • @AppliedScience
    @AppliedScience 9 лет назад +480

    Wow! This is really interesting footage of the interior of the power plant. Very cool.

    • @babybearkill1
      @babybearkill1 9 лет назад +7

      A horrifying lesson that seems to be taught every few decades

    • @carpetmonk
      @carpetmonk 9 лет назад +5

      BIONERD! I love her videos.. been subscribed a long time.

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +4

      BBK1 Plymouth will probably be the next to go. Its 50 miles from Cape Cod and the Islands and is the same design as the plant at Fukushima. Their license was supposed to expire a couple years ago because the plant is 40 years old and pipes are being corroded out from the inside. But people with money and power turned a blind eye and kept it going, awarding a contract even though the plant had outstanding safety violations. This year they've had a couple "mishaps" already, I believe. Since Yucca Mountain nuclear fuel repository (tasked with storing the radioactive "spent" fuel for MILLENNIA) never got the go-ahead, Pilgrim has been storing all their used fuel at the plant, maybe 4X what is supposed to be there. There is no evacuation plan for the Cape at present when this thing goes up. Not if, WHEN. Hopefully, I'll be out of here by then, but many of my friends will have to live with it. I pray it never happens in their lifetimes, but given that 40 years is the life expectancy of such plants (if I remember correctly), its quite possible that it will.

    • @babybearkill1
      @babybearkill1 9 лет назад +3

      privatear2001
      Given the sole interest is profiteering from such plants, the frequency of accidents in these ageing plants will increase. Just think of the parallels, if your car engine was 40 years old you would expect it to break down at any moment, how can we possibly imagine that nuclear plants are any different?
      I want you to consider the laws and controls put in place for vehicle emissions and safety in the last 4 years then compare it to nuclear power. It's a shocking revelation.

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +2

      BBK1 I know well about that one. My car IS 26 years old this year and I have to try ever trick in the book except rubber bands to keep it alive. Can't kill the motor so far, but given its a recycled tin can (Toyota) from Japan, the steel lasts no time. I have to maintain it for my own safety and the safety of anyone on the road with me. I get it inspected EVERY year and I will be flagged if something is wrong and no taxpayer gives me the money to fix it.
      But sometimes there seems to be no such accountability for the people who build, open, run, and have nuclear disasters at these plants. Everything is taxpayer funded (or so I've heard). And I've heard it said also that no insurance agency underwrites these plants (which seems odd, so may be wrong). So if there's no liability to these people in any way whatsoever, then all they have to do is make money hand over fist and then walk away and apologize when their baby goes boom and contaminates vast areas. Perhaps the apology will go like this: watch?v=9u0EL_u4nvw :)
      So of course there is no incentive to ever shut these plants down unless you are an owner with a moral conscience, of which I'm convinced many do not possess. That being said, however, Entergy, the owner of Pilgrim, is slated to shut down the aging plant they have in Vermont because it too is failing and they're two years into another 20 year contract. And sources suggest Pilgrim is slated for shutdown too. Hopefully before its too late to avoid another Fukushima.
      I'm not an environmentalist per se, but I really do believe that the reason Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors (used in subs and aircraft carriers, I do believe, which shut down on their own AUTOMATICALLY if something goes wrong - no human decision required) weren't considered in the 50's and 60's is because they didn't create fissile material. I've read certain plants put out about 440 pounds of Plutonium each year. You need 10 for a bomb ∴ 44 bombs a year. Do we really need our children to grow up in a world with nuclear weapons hanging over their heads and a bunch of sociopath politicians in control of the firing triggers with such infantile excuses as "Remember, this is the man who tried to kill my Dad?" I really don't think so.:)

  • @aNYCe2418
    @aNYCe2418 5 лет назад +111

    Wow. "The Bridge Of Death" scene was portrayed damn near perfect in Chernobyl's 1st episode

    • @lucasimark7992
      @lucasimark7992 5 лет назад +11

      aNYCe2418 it was filmed at Ignalina Power plant, an identical powerplant in lituania which was only closed in 2004

    • @jahrhome
      @jahrhome 5 лет назад +2

      I found the bridge today on Google earth it was actually really sad to see

    • @aNYCe2418
      @aNYCe2418 5 лет назад +1

      @I. Wynn Wynn the part in Episode 1 where the locals go to that overpass/bridge to get a better view of the blown reactor.

    • @valaxius
      @valaxius 5 лет назад +2

      @bad joe It really happen. Its not hard to research something and see overwhelming accounts of it.

    • @Jebu911
      @Jebu911 5 лет назад +14

      @bad joe Yeah its one of those myths like when people say that all the 3 divers died but 2 of them are still alive and the senior diver pretty much died of old age.

  • @kenzolr9373
    @kenzolr9373 5 лет назад +632

    Is comrade Dyatlov still in the toilet?

  • @CombatMedicTM
    @CombatMedicTM 6 лет назад +71

    Haunting, especially the part about Khodemchuk.
    To imagine his remains, whatever is left of it, are still there...

    • @futureshaman83
      @futureshaman83 4 года назад +1

      It's probably dust by now, the neutrons been blasting throughout everything

    • @willappleton6078
      @willappleton6078 4 года назад +3

      @@futureshaman83 neutrons cant travel that far in air. They can barely make it through tin foil. The gamma rays would have done the most damage.

  • @jordyboy321
    @jordyboy321 5 лет назад +245

    *Counter going mad*
    'lets just stand here and have a conversation'

    • @allthingsdirt
      @allthingsdirt 5 лет назад +82

      It was only 3.6. Roughly the equivalent of a chest xray

    • @sparrow56able
      @sparrow56able 5 лет назад +53

      @@allthingsdirt well that's not great but not horrifying

    • @MatthijsvanDuin
      @MatthijsvanDuin 5 лет назад +25

      @@sparrow56able The "equivalent of a chest x-ray" thing is just a meme. Her detector was showing a dose rate of 15 μSv/h, which is not negligible, but also not hugely dangerous. If you'd be exposed to that dose rate for 40 hours per week, every week, then after a year the cumulative dose would be 31.3 mSv, which is still substantially less than the 50 mSv annual occupational dose limit for U.S. radiation workers.

    • @madddogg7920
      @madddogg7920 5 лет назад +10

      I would imagine that the Geiger counter would go REALLY nuts if they were to open the door and look try to look at the remains of reactor #4. It's crazy to think that people can actually tour the plant now.

    • @hamschh
      @hamschh 5 лет назад +7

      @@MatthijsvanDuin /r/woosh

  • @blackthorn2200
    @blackthorn2200 9 лет назад +418

    They ran the other 3 reactors up in till 2000? That's some cheeki breeki shit right there.
    By far the best documentary that I have seen.

    • @enricopassoni1
      @enricopassoni1 5 лет назад

      Yes

    • @lukeshaver1149
      @lukeshaver1149 5 лет назад +57

      No, only one reactor ran untl 2000, the other 2 were shut down in the 1990s.

    • @antoniocignozzi1477
      @antoniocignozzi1477 5 лет назад +16

      Go watch Chernobyl 3828 liquidators , that's some great footage

    • @markus4395
      @markus4395 5 лет назад +7

      The workers weren't really worried about the Radiation but in year 2000 they ended.

    • @type2523
      @type2523 5 лет назад +6

      SirDigby83 the rbmk reactor was updated and built almost indestructible after the accident, it would probably even safe to use even today! As it got deactivated it didn't even end it's life cycle . Anyways they got deactivated because the EU wanted it and because some people ( politicians ) get money when building stuff ( corruption )

  • @Sprotdude17
    @Sprotdude17 9 лет назад +135

    Man, imagine the amazing home footage that the citizens would have got if they would of had video cameras.

    • @trollinator101
      @trollinator101 9 лет назад +36

      The radiation ruined film, and even with the cameras available, the pictures may not have turned out well if it all, illustrated by the man who took now infamous pictures of the Reactor #4 from above.
      Out of all the pictures he took, only one was usable due to the effects of radiation.
      This aside, original footage shot from the perspectives of actual people who went through this would be spectacular

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +20

      Sgt_14tjyd _ That was Igor Kostin, I believe. He has a bunch of pictures here as well: www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2011/apr/26/chernobyl-nuclear-disaster-in-pictures - Number 8 down the page shows "bio-robots" cleaning the roof of reactor 3 of all the graphite core material. Estimates were 10-12000 Roentgens0hr being released. 40 seconds exposure and you had a lifetime dose of the stuff, according to the explanation to the right. The light areas in the bottom of the picture, as explained by Kostin, were where radiation was rising off the roof in front of his camera. He also said you couldn't hear anything up there and that it was other-worldly.

    • @InfinityPotato97
      @InfinityPotato97 9 лет назад +5

      +Jorgito Yokiro Cabrera R.I.P. Igor Kostin 27 December 1936 - 9 June 2015

    • @KuvDabGib
      @KuvDabGib 5 лет назад +4

      It would be of no use - older models would get their film ruined by X rays penetrating and coloring film in camera casing.. new digital ones( with CCD) would die due to damage of neutrons to the sensitive electronics inside... So one way or another there wouldnt be too much useful videos, unfortunately

    • @jasonmiller9874
      @jasonmiller9874 5 лет назад

      watch chernobyl 3828 on youtube

  • @tarahawk6244
    @tarahawk6244 9 лет назад +27

    Thank you bionerd23! This is one of the best pieces I have seen on Chernobyl. Footage of the famous "golden corridor", reactor configuration, details on how the control room monitors worked including the fuel rod swapping process & tracking channels, the fuel storage complex, pump rooms and the poignant memorial to Valery Khodemchuk (the senior operator of reactor #4's main circulation pump whose body was never recovered as he was trapped under the explosion wreckage of the steam separator drums).

  • @MayaPosch
    @MayaPosch 9 лет назад +16

    That happy, warm fuzzy feeling when you realize that nobody will ever be crazy enough to build an RBMK or similar positive void co-efficient nuclear reactor again.
    All remaining RBMK reactors (at Chernobyl, in Russia and elsewhere) were all adjusted after the Reactor 4 accident to reduce their void co-efficient, thus reducing the possibility of such a run-away catastrophe.
    As the accident at Fukushima Daiichi showed, when you take a proper (though still outdated) Gen II reactor with a negative void co-efficient and a reactor containment vessel, and then abuse the heck out of it for countless decades while ignoring every possible safety measure (thanks, TEPCO!), when it finally goes, it's with a sizzle, as the only 'boom' was from the hydrogen explosions.
    Naturally, the RBMK design was both meant to be extremely cheap (by skipping basic safety measures like a containment vessel, and using cheaper yet risky graphite as moderator), and to be capable of producing weapons-grade plutonium and such isotopes, as it was still an adapted military reactor design. This was the reason behind the ability to hot-swap fuel rods.
    Many lessons should be learned from accidents like Chernobyl, the primary one being that the most prominent link in any accident chain is pretty much always going to be human factors. The tragedy is that such lessons tend to be at the cost of innocent lives.

    • @janovlk
      @janovlk 9 лет назад +2

      There were other accidents in RBMK power plants connected with low power mode. Reactors were harmed but sustained high pressures and temperatures. It happened even in power plant very close to St. Petersburg. Operators of RBMK reactors couldn't learn from those accidents because of ubiquitous secrecy.
      An accident happened in 1982 at Chernobyl reactor 1 . One of the pressure channels was blocked. An operator closed a valve by mistake. The fuel rod exploded and damaged the graphite channel. Radiation was spilled from ventilation to other parts of power plant.
      Today, parameters from all the Russian nuclear power plants are transmitted to the Moscow supervision center in real time.

    • @AppleUploader
      @AppleUploader 9 лет назад +1

      Maya Posch Overall pretty good reactors, just don't act like a dumb ass when operating them and you'll be fine.

  • @Aussie50
    @Aussie50 9 лет назад +59

    Amazing walk-through and tribute to those who have fallen on the Machine Frontier, nuclear power is an amazing thing, as deadly as it is.
    I am glad they let you in for a tour :D, it goes to show that its not all restricted, and that they recognize youtubers as a means of showing the world what has happened, and what is happening to clean up the mess too.

    • @BradMottram
      @BradMottram 9 лет назад +1

      I agree with you there. Such an amazing place to go for a visit.

    • @Alexthebro265
      @Alexthebro265 9 лет назад +4

      for me i would stop and turn around at unit 2.

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад

      Al Thom I probably would too... oh well, "in for a penny, in for a pound!"

    • @Kubko5656
      @Kubko5656 9 лет назад

      Aussie50 How interesting meeting you here Aussie O_o . But yeah, it´s awesome.

    • @JamerTheProgrammer
      @JamerTheProgrammer 9 лет назад

      Jakub Fabo Yeah! Small world, of all the places!

  • @ThriveSkateboards
    @ThriveSkateboards 9 лет назад +5

    I love you and all you're doing/showing. I've had a heavy interest in the exclusion zone for a few years now and there is nothing else, that I've come across, that opens the doors to this incredible place like you do. I've now seen parts of Chernobyl and Pripyat, because of you, that I'm sure I would never see myself if I was to visit and tour. So, thank you for sharing your own love of this place so that the rest of us can become engulfed and engaged just like you do.

  • @wrongwayup.
    @wrongwayup. 9 лет назад +8

    I never really get excited about any channel I subscribe to uploading a video, except yours. Your Chernobyl content is just great. Keep it up!

  • @tsusec
    @tsusec 7 лет назад +112

    Get out of here STALKER!
    Did you find Strelok?

  • @GrnArrow092
    @GrnArrow092 9 лет назад +2

    Thanks for the Chernobyl tour video. I've had only vague ideas of the layout of the plant from videos I've seen. I've seen a few videos of reenactments of the disaster that only tells you how the disaster happened and weren't exactly clear of the layout of the plant. I like how everything was shown in more detail and how the plant was operated. I would have thought the hallways around reactor 4 would be too high to walk though, but it seems from the low readings from the gamma scout, the radiation levels were acceptable. I was curious if all the radiation in the hallway was coming through the walls or if there were still radioactive particles remaining from the disaster. Seeing that big red door sealing off reactor 4 illustrated more on how dangerous the remains of reactor 4 still are. Overall, great video. I hope there is still more to see there.

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +3

      GrnArrow092 the area has been decontaminated with great efforts, also to ensure the (relative) safety of people working with the other three OPERATIONAL reactors for many years to come after the accident, so there's no real contamination risk inside these hallways. most of the radiation indeed seems to come from the reactor 4 building. i'm not sure if some rooms were just sealed and abandoned - not decontaminated - though.

  • @bigums21
    @bigums21 5 лет назад +24

    I had no idea people still work there! This was genuinely fascinating to watch

    • @bigums21
      @bigums21 5 лет назад +1

      @Just Here good to know, thanks

    • @Napoleon_Blownapart
      @Napoleon_Blownapart 5 лет назад +2

      @Just Here actually, 2 ran until 1991, 1 at 1996 and 3 until year 2000. the plant is shut down. but not fully decommissioned yet.

    • @cokeforever
      @cokeforever 4 года назад +1

      the French are building a huge (1GW) solar power farm on territory where now-drained cooling pond was - what a great symbol

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela 9 лет назад +3

    Fantastic video. Great close ups of the control room, and lots of detail. Also, a fitting tribute.

  • @mytmousemalibu
    @mytmousemalibu 9 лет назад +75

    One of, if not your finest video. Rest in peace, all those whom lost their lives during and after the accident.
    Bravo on the video!

    • @GoddardsJournal
      @GoddardsJournal 9 лет назад +1

      No surprise the views are rolling, I bet this'll be one of her most popular videos.

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +5

      mytmousemalibu Agreed! In the BBC documentary, something like Chernobyl Uncensored, Gorbachev is interviewed and remarks that if these people hadn't given their lives, ALL of Europe would have been an uninhabitable wasteland to this day. Most people on that continent don't know how lucky they are. Some fields in Great Britain are still so contaminated to this day that they can't use them for crops even. That was just from the meltdown that was contained... So I try to mention it every year on my facebook page on the date. We should all be very thankful to the 600,000 liquidators who made the world a better place for the rest of us by their heroism.

    • @mytmousemalibu
      @mytmousemalibu 9 лет назад +5

      Its fascinating and terrifying at the same time. I remember back in 86 when it happened, the whole world on pins & needles. It was scary. The awesome, massive, intense, and invisible enemy to life released open to the world that day in 1986. Radiation so incredibly strong that you could be fatally dosed in seconds. Like looking over the edge into the reactor was an instant death sentence. Radiation so strong it could be tasted and even disturbed your thought process. And poorly equipped men worked in these conditions. How about the men that dived the bubble pool, full of water that some of which ran through the reactor! It was a death sentence. Can you imagine picking up the actual graphite and fuel with your hands... How about the initial responders and workers that were in the vicinity of the reactor right after the explosion. The firefighters too. I can't imagine walking into radiation so strong you essentially dropped where you stood and died. It really is terrifying. They went home to have children that were horribly affected as did the residents all around. Liquidators that later died horrible deaths, like rotting away while alive. It's important to remember our past mistakes so they don't end up repeated. Now we have the epic disaster that is Fukushima also.

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +16

      mytmousemalibu well, these brave people actually prevented an even bigger disaster by their actions of "liquidation". one may argue that some firefighters who were brought in from outside were not fully informed about the risks and dose rates, and the evacuation notice was definitely downplaying it all greatly - but the reactor operators knew what they were being exposed to. the engineers all knew it. yet, they went inside and for example, tried to locate Valery Khodemtchuk, and they perfectly well knew they were risking their own lives by doing so. when they used robots and those got stuck, they tried to free them, at worst by running there and trying to make them operable again, which killed quite a lot of people shortly (days to maximum a few years).
      there's a saying, "you only know a certain friend in uncertain times", and even in these extreme times, people valued the lives of others at least as much as their own, if not more.
      now look at these modern times and the western world, look at ships sinking... you'll see the people who understand their life is at risk running at first, the captain and crew will leave the ship first, leaving the others to die. egoism first, fuck everybody else.

    • @mytmousemalibu
      @mytmousemalibu 9 лет назад +6

      bionerd23 I don't disagree at all. Those that gave their lives at Chernobyl are as heroic as any soldier. The actions by those brave souls saved countless lives. I had some family living in Europe at that time. My dad & his entire side of the family is from Kaiserslautern, and we have some family scattered across Germany at any given time. We were worried for them and everyone else at the time of the accident. Those that fought the battle against the invisible enemy don't get the recognition they deserve. The people that were simply victims of proximity to fallout didn't get the support and care they needed either. I'm glad you produce the great videos you do, it keeps it fresh in our minds, those of us that care. Most of the world has already forgotten Fukushima, water under the bridge, off most peoples radar and that was only 4 years ago.

  • @zapranoth
    @zapranoth 9 лет назад +3

    Awesome video, As always. Love your hand drawn maps!

  • @lonw.7016
    @lonw.7016 9 лет назад +2

    Haven't watched your vids in any particular order. Am beginning to see what drew you into this series, and over time you nerded out. It is so darn interesting, scary/creepy/weird, and worthy of examination. Am glad to have found this. thanks for your efforts.

  • @cowtippingrocks
    @cowtippingrocks 9 лет назад +5

    "what a fucking terrible way to die" you couldn't have put it better.

  • @andyagf6870
    @andyagf6870 5 лет назад +6

    How anyone survied that is unreal. The radiation levels even in 2015! So many lives. So many hero's that went in after the explosion.

  • @arfhannam
    @arfhannam 9 лет назад +1

    Love your vids, thank you for being crazy enough to ho and show us what the zone looks like now...
    Love all your videos, keep up the amazing work, and thank you for taking the time to editing and uploading them to RUclips :)

  • @priestpilot
    @priestpilot 7 лет назад +50

    I've always thought that the decorative floors look interesting.

    • @pho3nix-
      @pho3nix- 5 лет назад +5

      Typical Soviet design of the time lol

    • @candidoj
      @candidoj 5 лет назад +1

      true

  • @lukeskywalker1840
    @lukeskywalker1840 5 лет назад +320

    This is what RUclips should be. Interesting and educational material that you can learn from. Less stupid videos about punking stuck up girls or dumb pet tricks. We need more videos like this on here. Well done to the film makers.

    • @markus4395
      @markus4395 5 лет назад +2

      True

    • @lukeskywalker1840
      @lukeskywalker1840 5 лет назад +6

      @Tim Stephen I'm well aware of that. I'm making a opinionated statement. Maybe you should do a quick search and see how many Justin Bieber videos there are and people trying to do stupid pet tricks. You know exactly what I'm talking about.

    • @lukeskywalker1840
      @lukeskywalker1840 5 лет назад +3

      @Tim Stephen Keep laughing and being cynical. I don't remember once asking for your opinion.

    • @ryancparker
      @ryancparker 5 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/2fS9ixfQ_no/видео.html

    • @lukeskywalker1840
      @lukeskywalker1840 5 лет назад +1

      @@ryancparker Interesting. Thank you.

  • @goawaypls4559
    @goawaypls4559 5 лет назад +22

    I got an ad from HBO to the miniseries. Clever.

    • @kafka5795
      @kafka5795 5 лет назад

      *I mean If you have searched or watched further videos about Chernobyl, it makes sense that RUclips’s algorithm would send you those add’s :)*

  • @theupstateniko
    @theupstateniko 8 лет назад +1

    Well done. This video is incredible. So we'll put together. Great job! If I'm not mistaken, I think a documentary about the Chernobyl disaster was made in the very same control room you were in! Incredible video.

  • @andreas.charalambides
    @andreas.charalambides 9 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much. Always wanted to see all these and the information this video is giving is detailed to the last bit.

  • @firestorm7977
    @firestorm7977 5 лет назад +139

    Who is here after watching the Chernobyl mini series on AMC?

    • @antoniocmf6238
      @antoniocmf6238 5 лет назад +2

      I am bro...🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @firestorm7977
      @firestorm7977 5 лет назад

      😂👍

    • @firestorm7977
      @firestorm7977 5 лет назад

      Reverend RunBad heard of watching online? It’s also on sky in the uk.

    • @firestorm7977
      @firestorm7977 5 лет назад

      Reverend RunBad 😂😂😂 sorry bro legit thought you we’re trying to troll.

    • @amorag59
      @amorag59 5 лет назад +4

      @Reverend RunBad He's delusional, take him to the infirmary, take him!

  • @robertholsopple9451
    @robertholsopple9451 5 лет назад +6

    Chernobyl changed so much recently. This is important footage to have for history. Thank you for posting.

  • @lordwalrus900
    @lordwalrus900 9 лет назад

    Yes! I have been waiting all day for this! Thank you sooo much!!! :D

  • @tucker4182
    @tucker4182 5 лет назад +1

    Great video. Love the over lap of locations. Just amazing!! Thank you.

  • @StreuB1
    @StreuB1 9 лет назад +5

    Chilling video. Thank you for making it and sharing. Bless those that died to protect the rest of the world.

  • @SocialGore
    @SocialGore 5 лет назад +53

    The core didn't explode. You're in shock. Get to the infirmary.

    • @jakethesnake2051
      @jakethesnake2051 5 лет назад

      What

    • @roderickwilliams67
      @roderickwilliams67 5 лет назад +2

      @@jakethesnake2051 watch the Chernobyl HBO series

    • @shortkutt4965
      @shortkutt4965 4 года назад

      Ive been a nuclear scientist for 35 years .....before now you made shoes......god bless communism

    • @xDutchCat2131
      @xDutchCat2131 4 года назад +1

      3.6 roentgens, not great not terrible

    • @xDutchCat2131
      @xDutchCat2131 4 года назад

      @Sjoerd van Rijswijk kanker. Aaha

  • @michaelgaylard5237
    @michaelgaylard5237 9 лет назад +1

    Awesome, thank you so much! ☺
    I always look forward to your videos.

  • @XLordLeamingtonX
    @XLordLeamingtonX 5 лет назад +1

    This is a great video especially seeing the inside of the buildings and demonstrations of how the plant functions

  • @incubus_the_man
    @incubus_the_man 9 лет назад +3

    Thanks for showing us the inside of this place. I don't think I've seen some of those places in the documentaries that I've seen. You could make a short documentary detailing how the accident happened. You wouldn't have to record very much new material because you have already have a lot to work with.

  • @fullride5
    @fullride5 5 лет назад +3

    Great video one of the best I’ve seen as far as exclusive video of the real thing.

  • @initialb5009
    @initialb5009 8 лет назад +1

    haven't seen your videos in a long time.. good to be back.

  • @AyoxinBlake
    @AyoxinBlake 5 лет назад +2

    Just saw your channel, thank you (belatedly) for sharing the inside of the NPP. It was interesting, I had no idea Ходимчук had a memorial inside, I always figured it was outside the plant. May the man rest in peace alongside the others who died after the disaster.

  • @BRIANSTECHTHERAPY
    @BRIANSTECHTHERAPY 7 лет назад +4

    These videos are amazing!! Great job!!

  • @anatolydyatlov4103
    @anatolydyatlov4103 5 лет назад +18

    Good old days

    • @anatolydyatlov4103
      @anatolydyatlov4103 5 лет назад +5

      @Reverend RunBad he is having a shock. Take him to infirmary.

    • @gabrielatschool-.-3869
      @gabrielatschool-.-3869 4 года назад

      @Reverend RunBad In the soviet Union The core didnt explode. The core explodes you. Idiot lol xdd

  • @rwilly
    @rwilly 9 лет назад +1

    Your best video yet. Thank you for bringing us along with you for this rare look inside ChNPP.

  • @NicholasAarons
    @NicholasAarons 7 лет назад +1

    Unreal & Amazing Video. Keep up the great work. Nick.

  • @aaron71
    @aaron71 8 лет назад +7

    Ok, so after this video I now know that the whole area isn't a total ghost town. I thought it was 100% abandoned and you couldn't go NEAR the reactors without evaporating or something. To learn that they kept it operational for 14 years after the accident and people STILL work there and drive through blows my mind. With all this said, why is the city of Pripyat still abandoned? Why can they not wash & remove the radiation and rebuild? Great video, very informative!!

    • @vNasttyy
      @vNasttyy 8 лет назад +5

      Because there is still so much radiation in many of the areas there and still a lot of radiation below the reactor itself. The immediate reactor will remain radiated for thousands of years leaving it rather inhabitable and dangerous. Yes there are spots of the exclusion zone that you can access but there is still soo much there its still very hard to live a "normal" life for all the precautions you would have to take in other areas.

    • @vNasttyy
      @vNasttyy 8 лет назад +1

      +BrandoNast **radioactive material below the reactor. A lot of it has actually hardened which is also called 'elephants foot' which still emits radiation.

    • @MrSmilingDeath
      @MrSmilingDeath 8 лет назад +1

      +BrandoNast So much radiation that just being within eyesight of it with full protective gear is lethal after about 500 seconds.

  • @tompeddle
    @tompeddle 7 лет назад +10

    Fascinating video. Thanks for taking the time to film and upload it.

  • @Pyro19903
    @Pyro19903 9 лет назад +1

    thank you for the footage great shots of the control room

  • @Indrid__Cold
    @Indrid__Cold 9 лет назад +2

    You are an incredibly dynamic young lady. Your enthusiasm for your quest for knowledge is contagious. You also have a remarkably relaxing voice. Considering the dangerous environment you are visiting, that is almost disconcerting.

  • @Marijo79
    @Marijo79 8 лет назад +3

    Absolutely brilliant this video you rule!!! Thank you so much for this hugs from Argentina ☺

  • @oldschoolgamer2337
    @oldschoolgamer2337 5 лет назад +4

    This was such a amazing video.. so sad to see a city what it was in its a day to what it is today... Rest in peace to all the people that put there own lives in danger to help others live a beter life. Excellent job on this video too..

  • @kev-the-windsurfer.
    @kev-the-windsurfer. 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for posting this most excellent detailed and well informed video, I really enjoyed the commentary, and of course, immense respect for the people involved in containing and dealing with the mess. Those poor workers what an absolutely awful way to die.....

  • @karnubawax
    @karnubawax 7 лет назад

    Your videos are fascinating. Plus I could listen to you talk all day :)

  • @Kryogh
    @Kryogh 8 лет назад +101

    you forgot to show us the wish granter

    • @psicogames5509
      @psicogames5509 8 лет назад +12

      i want to be rich

    • @BeepingMetal
      @BeepingMetal 7 лет назад +7

      No. You don't.

    • @CoNnOr5899
      @CoNnOr5899 7 лет назад +5

      I want to rule the World

    • @floriansoos4716
      @floriansoos4716 6 лет назад +2

      Get out of here st..monolith oh monolith we thank you for revealing the cunning plans of your enemies...............

    • @BlackHawkShines
      @BlackHawkShines 6 лет назад

      I want immortality.

  • @10191927
    @10191927 9 лет назад +7

    That's really amazing to actually see inside of the Chernobyl plant, where so few people actually get to go. Seeing the control panel, it amazes me that they made such a critical error when they dropped the power in reactor 4 setting off the reactions that made it explode.

    • @ellicopter1
      @ellicopter1 9 лет назад +9

      Marth They didnt make an error, they followed the protocol correctly, but one of the steps caused a huge power surge, this was known by the people who designed the reactor, But to save national pride, eg ''russian reactors are superior''.... This known fault was not told to the operators and totally covered up, The operators are true hero's and died trying to shut the reactor down, they were blamed for the catastrophe, But it came out in later years that they had followed the correct procedure, and the design of the reactor was at fault.

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +3

      Aaron Elliott What a bizarre way to handle things, not telling the people who really need to know, about the design flaw. That one critical piece of information would have saved so many thousands of lives. The "Devil is in the details", as they say...

    • @ellicopter1
      @ellicopter1 9 лет назад +3

      privatear2001 I know, It was how the soviets operated at the time, any flaw or accident was covered up, There are many unsung heros of the soviet rocket programme that died and such was the secrecy that even their family never told the truth of how they died.

    • @bobl78
      @bobl78 9 лет назад +3

      Aaron Elliott they are victims of their System and culture...same Thing in Fukushima... they were poorly trained for emergency situtations and did not know how what to do because Desasters are "not allowed"

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +2

      bobl78 Well, to assume that "it can't happen here" because we're better at keeping things under control is, I think, a false presumption. We have the same problems at Pilgrim Nuclear Power plant up in Plymouth. Two years ago, they just got another license for 20 years even though they were at the 40 year end-of-life term and have had various problems including aging pipes corroding from the inside out. This alone should tell us that someone has more than people's safety in mind (ie: money). They're gambling with people's lives that they can keep it going without a major problem, even while agreeing that it is the end-of-life for this plant and it should be shut down.
      The plant shut down automatically anyway this past winter during a snowstorm when outside power failed. So to me the problem isn't how much training these people have, it is how do they react to a situation that ISN'T in the books? Like a bunch of cooling pipes failing all at once. And these aren't a small cost, as I think they have to use some form of gold or platinum to line them because the corrosion is so harsh. So to presume we have achieved mastery over Physics, Mother Nature and Murphy's Law is a big stretch for me.
      I always wanted to build a completely self-sufficient solar heated house. Now there are two ways to do it: active (which requires me to do something manually to keep something working) or passive (which operates independently of me for the most part). If I were building, I would do it passive, using such technology as skylids, closed heating system, proper East West orientation, etc. Simple is better.
      In the 50's, I think, there was a choice between the reactors like we have at Pilgrim (which is the same design as the one in Fukushima) or something called a Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor, which they adopted for use in subs and aircraft carriers because of its inherent stability and ability to shut itself down once the equipment fails. From what I understand, we opted for the (ACTIVE) much- less-safe Light Water Reactors because they could produce fissile materials for bombs, stuff that has half-lives of thousands or millions of years. I would have had us go the (PASSIVE) LFTR route, as the inventor of LFTR expressed. He was appalled when he was ordered to abandon it. (Read more about LFTR's here: www.physicsforums.com/threads/liquid-fluoride-thorium-reactor.520161/)
      Really, I don't think any of us has the common sense to handle this technology based on what I've seen in the last few years. I also think, if there be any advanced race out there in space, they may be looking down on us in horror as infants playing with matches and dynamite. That's really what I feel.

  • @TheMetalmachine467
    @TheMetalmachine467 9 лет назад +2

    Thanks for uploading video I've watched every video and is very interesting.

  • @charleyprice309
    @charleyprice309 5 лет назад +1

    Great video. Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @jamesfoote8916
    @jamesfoote8916 8 лет назад +6

    Amazing video thank you

  • @zaierrahutson5815
    @zaierrahutson5815 8 лет назад +16

    30 years later today

  • @Kaspurr84
    @Kaspurr84 9 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing, I love all your videos.

  • @Stainz05
    @Stainz05 9 лет назад +2

    Thank you for another great video on the 29th anniversary - a fitting tribute to those who died.

  • @henryrichards1542
    @henryrichards1542 9 лет назад +4

    Bionerd - love your videos, they are all informative and engaging! I have a question on the "bridge of death" you mention in the beginning of the video. None of those deaths are reported in the official literature that I've seen. Naturally, I put little stock in the official Soviet reports either way. But I'm curious where you heard/read of those individuals and their fate, etc. Thank You!

  • @SirGosht
    @SirGosht 8 лет назад +7

    I was told by my Chernobyl guide that actually very few people from the "Bridge of Death" died.

    • @kungfujesus1874
      @kungfujesus1874 8 лет назад +5

      Yes only people that wear on foot did every one else in cars, buses were ok

  • @lonw.7016
    @lonw.7016 7 лет назад +1

    Am watching this again. Goes very well with the vid you just put up.

  • @antoniom.4979
    @antoniom.4979 9 лет назад +2

    Congratulation you are on Italian newspaper "Corriere della Sera", thx for all your video. great job!

  • @rjy8960
    @rjy8960 9 лет назад +4

    Thanks Bionerd, another really fascinating video and really well presented :)

  • @Varskar
    @Varskar 5 лет назад +24

    With the chimney removed, that place lost its mystic atmosphere.

    • @vidmizz
      @vidmizz 5 лет назад +5

      I'd rather it not look pretty and not poison the entire region and ruin countless lives than the other way around

    • @Varskar
      @Varskar 5 лет назад +1

      @@vidmizz
      It would never happen but every reason is good to take such large investments. People will justify everything when there is big money involved.

    • @halofreak1990
      @halofreak1990 5 лет назад +4

      @@Varskar Thing is, the large chimney was in the way; If you look at aerial photos of the plant, you can see that the outer wall of the New Safe Confinement is located where the old chimney had stood prior. They simply could not keep it in place, even if they wanted to (because the chimney had reached the end of its 30-year design lifespan, anyway)
      As for @ChuckNorrison's comment, the amount of radiation emitted from the chimneys is pretty low, due to a plethora of filters trapping any radioactive aerosols before they can be discharged into the air. Remember that, during normal operation, the chimney is used to discharge air from the reactor spaces, anyway, so its continued use for its intended purpose after the accident had no different environmental impact than before the accident.

    • @ericsson_motorsports
      @ericsson_motorsports 3 года назад +2

      @@Varskar The new confinement has significantly reduced the radiation levels outside the power plant, Also the old sarcohpagus was at risk of collapsing and if that happened lots of radiation could leak into the atmosphere. This isn't a case of justifying anything because of big money being involved at all.

  • @danozism
    @danozism 8 лет назад +1

    After further viewing, BN23, this is fantastic. Thanks again. DJH

  • @Momfasa
    @Momfasa 9 лет назад +1

    Oh fantastic! Amazing video! Thanks for this bionerd23

  • @JMsoo
    @JMsoo 8 лет назад +5

    how you managed to get inside the plant I am going to visit in November, you had a journalist permission?

  • @crunchb3rry
    @crunchb3rry 5 лет назад +4

    Lol, I like that "map" overlay. That's a neat idea.

  • @ScreamingEagle101st
    @ScreamingEagle101st 5 лет назад +1

    Incredible video thank you x

  • @BushCampingTools
    @BushCampingTools 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for showing!

  • @m3sca1
    @m3sca1 9 лет назад +4

    Never knew the other reactors were still in operation for 14 years...i thought the place was an abandoned ghost facility

  • @yurif74
    @yurif74 9 лет назад +5

    this is one of the most beautiful report i ever saw regarding chernobyl nuclear plant, i'm very impressed by some lights still on here and there on control panels, what's the monument at about 14:10 ?

    • @MrJason005
      @MrJason005 8 лет назад

      +yurif74 It's a memorial to a head engineer that died when the accident happended, I believe.

  • @keithallso9157
    @keithallso9157 7 лет назад

    thank you so much for sharing the film you made

  • @roscoegrinde8993
    @roscoegrinde8993 9 лет назад +1

    Great video! I, as an american, that was born in 1980, do not know exactly what happened. This was the first of my exploration of exactly what happened to our earth, no longer having places that are safe, that are ruined by man. THANK YOU!

  • @stevemc6010
    @stevemc6010 9 лет назад +23

    "50,000 people used to live here, now it's a ghost town"

    • @Dude-yo5ec
      @Dude-yo5ec 5 лет назад +2

      "All gillied up theme music plays in the background"

    • @utkarshtripathi3179
      @utkarshtripathi3179 5 лет назад +1

      Never seen anything like it.

    • @kafka5795
      @kafka5795 5 лет назад

      **40.000 but get the reference...*

  • @privatear2001
    @privatear2001 9 лет назад +34

    Good job on putting some maps up there, by the way. I have a hard job keeping track of where things are in the zone. Couldn't really tell Pripyat from Chernobyl. Now the radiation you're picking up on the drive inside the cab of the truck is only background Gamma, right? You don't get Beta inside the vehicle? Have the drivers ever checked their air filter for radiation, I wonder? I wonder if anything that might emit Alpha particles get inside the cab on the dust from the road or blowing in the wind? Just thinking these things as I'm watching the video...

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +4

      privatear2001 well, hard betas could enter and / or be converted into photons, so the beta radiation will not be "zero", but yeah, it's mostly gammas inside the car. an air filter would be awesome to measure, but i wonder if they ever exchange those on their cars, lol. i should ask for that next time, good point!

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад +1

      bionerd23 Well, here's a fellow that people in this country like to disregard as a quack, but he does things the way I'd do them if I wanted to figure something out. He takes filters from cars in Tokyo as well as Air Conditioner filters high up in a window in Tokyo, and he finds elevated counts of radiation in them. /watch?v=U3YMa391qrE Of course, I thought it was a brilliant way to see if we received much fallout over here after the Fukushima incident because it should build up.
      Once in December 2011, when I got the Gammascout, it gave me a readout high above background when I pulled up at home in a heavy snowfall. Seemed like fallout in the snow. But it didn't seem much higher than background when I tried testing the car air filter with it.
      Just because some call him a quack, doesn't mean he doesn't do good science. Interestingly, while some have called you a shill for the nuclear industry (we your subscribers know you are not) they call him a quack because he speaks out against it - proving you can't win with ignorant biased people. Luckily you like to do science for science' sake. Thanks for all the great videos, Bionerd23!!!

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +3

      privatear2001 ugh, i have the common "news anchorman issue" with that guy. instead of showing some readings etc, some interesting footage, you just see his mouth movie for almost 10 minutes with nothing else to see. i am afraid my attention span is a little too short to watch this even in 2x speed.
      i skipped through and didnt see any spectrometry. that's a flaw. determining half lives by continued measurements over a certain amount of time, at least, is of major importance (if you dont have a spectrometer). many, many people measured radon daughters in filters etc. after fukushima and then panicked over nothing. it may also be other, natural radionuclides, as there are e.g. on the beaches of Brazil (to mention something i did videos about). there was fallout from fukushima in tokyo alright, i measured soil samples and detected radios of Cs-137 vs. Cs-134 in ratios meaning it is "fresh" from nuclear fuel.
      but if i had just received a soil sample that was radioactive, it could have been anything, including naturally radioactive volcano ash or the like.

    • @privatear2001
      @privatear2001 9 лет назад

      bionerd23 In part 2 he used the spectrometer and showed all the spikes from a half dozen isotopes he found. It might not have come up automatically on your page, but it was off to the right on mine. I posted a lot of questions on the comments about his methods and what instrumentation he was using. watch?v=oeS5dRkyBi0 he found Cs134 (42000 Bq/Kg), Cs137 (68000 Bq/Kg), Pb210 (7500 Bq/Kg), Th234 U238 (3000 Bq/Kg) , U235 (240 Bq/Kg), etc. He shows the peaks quite clearly. It was a good video, anyway.

    • @bionerd23
      @bionerd23  9 лет назад +1

      privatear2001 i indeed missed that. sounds quite high but provided the air filters do some good concentration (i have NO IDEA about cars, dont even have a driver's license!), those numbers are possible. i found a few kBq of Cs isotopes in sewer drain soil in Tokyo, so if those filters do some serious air throughput, i consider it possible. though those numbers always depend on calibration; if no perfect geometry calibration is applied, the readings may be far off. but it doesnt matter so much, even if it was a factor 10 less, it's still a lot.

  • @666tokarev
    @666tokarev 9 лет назад

    thank you for another great video!!

  • @kroghsmachineshop4708
    @kroghsmachineshop4708 9 лет назад

    Really really interesting video I enjoyed it very very much👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
    I have seen almost all your videos, they are very interesting and I learn a lot. Hi from Henning.

  • @saccharineserf7316
    @saccharineserf7316 5 лет назад +11

    ok so the cleanup may be nearly complete but someone needs to fix that misplaced floor tile at 3:27

  • @iamnotanuggetblackhart5103
    @iamnotanuggetblackhart5103 5 лет назад +5

    Hey Bionerd23, are you still active? Noticed you've dropped off the face of the earth (or at least the internet) for a bit now. Hope all is well.

  • @ExplorewithSvetlin
    @ExplorewithSvetlin 4 года назад +1

    The best Chernobyl videos you have made. I hope you are well.

  • @flambergetemple
    @flambergetemple 9 лет назад

    Thanks a lot for your contributions, they are outstanding!

  • @KB4QAA
    @KB4QAA 9 лет назад +9

    Bionerd23, Could you please add captions with the Gamma Scout readings and units (milliSieverts, microSieverts). Thanks.

    • @MarkRose1337
      @MarkRose1337 9 лет назад +4

      KB4QAA If you watch at 720 or 1080, it's easy to read them. The readings are in μSv/hour, and keep an eye out for the decimal place.

    • @KB4QAA
      @KB4QAA 9 лет назад +1

      Mark Rose Thank you for your tips!

  • @TheThorns
    @TheThorns 9 лет назад +3

    Can you recommend a Geiger counter for a beginner that is moderately priced?

  • @TheCrankshaftRotator
    @TheCrankshaftRotator 9 лет назад

    Wieder mal ein sensationell gutes Video, langsam werde ich regelrecht süchtig danach!

  • @CallieMasters5000
    @CallieMasters5000 5 лет назад +1

    The fact that you can't see radiation and everything looks like a big factory, it's hard to really get much out of these videos. The power plant probably looked just as depressing before the accident.

  • @RIP19851
    @RIP19851 5 лет назад +9

    I can’t believe it will be 33 this year

  • @CameraCapers
    @CameraCapers 9 лет назад +3

    I am transfixed by your exploration. Please be safe bionerd23!

  • @glmemory
    @glmemory 9 лет назад

    Very well done. Very informative. A few days ago I stumbled across another of your videos, about a different subject. It too was very well done. You do a good job in your presentation of scientific topics.

  • @NazarovVv
    @NazarovVv 8 лет назад

    This is a real gem of a video, thank you!

  • @sa230e
    @sa230e 9 лет назад +14

    This is SO cool.
    Maybe it sounds kind of morbid but I love seeing footage from inside the plant. I know a lot of people died there but it's fascinating to see all the old soviet technology and industrial architecture still preserved intact as it was in the 1980s. Also it's a place that was always very closed off. The Soviets would probably never have let a westerner with a camera in and after the accident it probably became even harder to get into. I bet it took a lot of string pulling and paperwork to get in there.
    If you have any more footage, I'd love to see it - even if you just throw it up unedited.
    P.S. Did they let you into one of the reactor halls? (Obviously not unit 4)

    • @Flapjackbatter
      @Flapjackbatter 9 лет назад +5

      sa230e "Maybe it sounds kind of morbid but I love seeing footage from inside the plant. I know a lot of people died there but it's fascinating to see all the old soviet technology and..."
      I hope you don't feel bad. Because you should not.
      Human curiosity is maybee more unstoppable than neutron radiation. And without it...who knows... we might not have out-competed the neandertals.
      We are certainly hardwired for strong curiosity. If we were not interested in why other people died young and in their prime, maybe we will fall victim to the same thing.
      That's what I think about it anyway.

    • @cokeforever
      @cokeforever 6 лет назад +2

      sa230e you can purchase a tour there... And yes bionerd23 and Carl Willis both have videos of standing on the reactor cap (over the decomissioned rods) and next to spent fuel rods pools, you can find those vids on both of their channels

  • @Jeepjones85
    @Jeepjones85 8 лет назад +4

    Wow I didn't realize they were actually people working there. Scary

    • @BirivaMartirizado
      @BirivaMartirizado 6 лет назад

      There's no one working there

    • @cokeforever
      @cokeforever 6 лет назад

      Pedro Cecconi there are hundreds workers there. ChNPP even has its own RUclips channel

  • @colosse182
    @colosse182 8 лет назад

    I would like to thank you for all of your videos. They're great and very instructive. Your passion is contagious. Keep on the good work!

  • @zestydude87
    @zestydude87 8 лет назад

    Love watching your videos. I was in high school when the accident happened. It was all over the news for quite a while.

    • @danijel124
      @danijel124 8 лет назад

      +zestydude87 Fukushima was also all over the news but the story faded away unfortunately