Extreme Construction: The New Chernobyl Shelter | FD Engineering

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 153

  • @spyro35trf
    @spyro35trf 20 дней назад +23

    2:33 "volunteered" was an interesting word choice

    • @AlliedBroom9081
      @AlliedBroom9081 19 дней назад

      They’ve volunteered on paper, the ones who didn’t suddenly disappeared

    • @bradleyfriend496
      @bradleyfriend496 17 дней назад +2

      Thousands of educated Soviet’s whole heartedly volunteered to help prevent further damage. Every Chernobyl history book says as much.

    • @clanc433
      @clanc433 6 дней назад

      @@bradleyfriend496 Thousands more were conscripted from oblasts far away from Moscow. Kind of like what they are doing currently. If it doesn't happen in Moscow, its not real.

  • @michaellynes3540
    @michaellynes3540 27 дней назад +5

    The Chernobyl Mega Tomb is the most epic engineering project in history.

  • @godlugner5327
    @godlugner5327 6 месяцев назад +33

    Little spicy pill, covered by big building shield, covered by bigger building shield, and then covered by bigger building shield.......
    Them some spicy little rocks

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Месяц назад

      To bad they don't build them like the USA they build a concrete building inside another concrete building they had the reactor built inside a metal building only shielding some of the control room but the reactor might as well be out in the open .....it's there own fault for building it this way ans even more for knowing there was a flaw in the design and letting test like this happen

    • @clanc433
      @clanc433 6 дней назад +1

      Yeah, the Soviets just kinda slapped a building up next to one of the largest nuclear reactors (7m tall) ever put into operation. Concrete and rebar were expensive, and RBMK reactors don't explode. Why would you need a big containment building?

    • @spinogrizgames
      @spinogrizgames 6 дней назад

      Independent Ukraine, actually

  • @rtgMTB
    @rtgMTB 17 дней назад +4

    man I wish they had 4K video back then

  • @fixedguitar47
    @fixedguitar47 21 день назад +5

    In VR you can stand on the roof and look into the burning reactor.

  • @grumpydude1598
    @grumpydude1598 Месяц назад +25

    50000 people used to live here... now its a ghost town

    • @Adam-om9si
      @Adam-om9si 26 дней назад +2

      Fantastic post never seen this post before

  • @SALTER818
    @SALTER818 Месяц назад +5

    12:48 the "fun fair" never actually opened before the disaster

  • @brisketman3757
    @brisketman3757 15 дней назад +4

    "Its too dangerous to build the arch above the containment building so we rolled it into place" also here we are standing inside the arch without any PPE. So is it safe or unsafe? 😂

  • @cchap24
    @cchap24 22 дня назад +4

    LOL they volunteered? Did anyone else catch that?

    • @bradleyfriend496
      @bradleyfriend496 17 дней назад

      Have you read any history books about the event ? Every one says thousands of educated Soviet’s volunteered to prevent further damage.

    • @MoonmanSpacejam
      @MoonmanSpacejam 2 дня назад

      They said they volunteered their life as to spare others.

  • @konman5550
    @konman5550 5 дней назад

    “Volunteered” - sure!

  • @Jab7581
    @Jab7581 Месяц назад +20

    I can't believe the guy that caused the accident wasn't put in jail for the rest of his life and right upto his death still claims it wasn't his fault.
    I feel sorry for all the men who put their own lives on the line to stop the leak and contain it because i bet some of them weren't given a choice about helping out with the clean up.

    • @IWannaGoMissing
      @IWannaGoMissing 29 дней назад +11

      We all watched that show but in reality it wasn’t just Dyatlov that was responsible. They made him the antagonist for entertainment. Several other operators in the room were deeply experienced and also continued to push the reactor. But ultimately there should have been rigid and strict safety guidelines so even a mistake does not cause this problem. They shouldn’t have tipped the control rods in graphite.
      Dyatlov as the main guilty party even the night of was a fiction for television. All the operators in the control room with any sense bore responsibility

    • @GWNorth-db8vn
      @GWNorth-db8vn 23 дня назад +4

      Dyatlov wasn't giving the orders on operating the reactor. He was a turbine expert, not a nuclear engineer. He demanded that the operators get the reactor to the power level to run the test, he didn't tell them how to do it. That was on Toptunov and Akimov.
      It was a horror movie, not a documentary.

    • @miscbits6399
      @miscbits6399 22 дня назад +2

      @@IWannaGoMissing Western nuclear scientists _BEGGED_ the Soviet Union not to build RBMK designs and what happened at Chernobyl was predicted as a serious risk long before ground was broken on the site, let alone the reactors built
      On the bright side, it demonstrated that even a really serious nuclear incident has a very small real world impact in the medium/long term, especially if you compare with things like Banquio

    • @IWannaGoMissing
      @IWannaGoMissing 17 дней назад +1

      @@miscbits6399 was the graphite moderator the core issue with RBMK reactors that made the West skeptical?

  • @eastcoastrifraf9101
    @eastcoastrifraf9101 23 дня назад +3

    Here you go grandkids. Enjoy.

  • @jayburton1743
    @jayburton1743 15 часов назад

    20000 years 😮

  • @maxdecleyn
    @maxdecleyn 6 месяцев назад +21

    nature in chernobyl has been thriving ever since the event ...

    • @jordanmolinaro6507
      @jordanmolinaro6507 Месяц назад +14

      No people = beautiful nature

    • @harryomar10
      @harryomar10 Месяц назад +8

      Puts in perspective who’s the real problem

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Месяц назад

      NO IT HASNT THE ANIMALS HAVE GOT BIRTH DEFECTS AND MANY OF THEM DIED IT WASNT TILL AFTER THE ORIGINAL CLEAN UP THAT THEY CAME BACK AND STARTED THRIVING GO READ A BOOK CAUSE YOU KNOW NOTHING

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад

      Naw God put us here😊​@@harryomar10

    • @dpelpal
      @dpelpal 29 дней назад +3

      Nope, russia invaded Ukraine and went right through it. Even dug holes everywhere in the area😂😂😂😂

  • @jamesbieniek8290
    @jamesbieniek8290 6 месяцев назад

    When i heard control room my heart sank. Lol

  • @jacksonnc8877
    @jacksonnc8877 День назад

    Id like to see the map of Russia and the United States they have detonated 5000 nuclear bombs between the two countries. The reason nuclear isn't world wide is because of the NHI having a look see

  • @alexsnell8177
    @alexsnell8177 12 дней назад

    What does this look like now with the war going on?

  • @zachschendt7201
    @zachschendt7201 21 день назад

    My favorite call of duty mission

  • @hnd450
    @hnd450 21 день назад +2

    Russia only confirms 31 died from this accident.

  • @ericnewton5720
    @ericnewton5720 Месяц назад +3

    I feel like they’ll find a way to not have finished this in 100 years and still costing the govt of Ukraine millions of dollars a year.

    • @heinz-haraldfrentzen1261
      @heinz-haraldfrentzen1261 Месяц назад +1

      The reality is that every 100 years or so, the arch will need to be replaced with a new one to keep the radioactive materials in. This meltdown will need to be dealt with over the next 20,000 years...

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад +1

      There not america😊

    • @miscbits6399
      @miscbits6399 22 дня назад

      @@heinz-haraldfrentzen1261 No, it won't. At about 120 years after the meltdown the caesium/stronium will essentially be gone and radioactivity levels quite low. At 450 years the mess will be less radioactive than the original fuel and you can safely handle that with bare hands as long as you wash them afterwards

    • @n3v3rforgott3n9
      @n3v3rforgott3n9 20 дней назад

      @@miscbits6399 "Experts have said it will be at least 3,000 years for the area to become safe, while others believe this is too optimistic. It is thought that the reactor site will not become habitable again for at least 20,000 years, according to a 2016 report."
      Ah yes, the youtube "expert" that knows more than the top scientists in the world.

    • @esxguru
      @esxguru 19 дней назад

      You spelled govt of Ukraine wrong... its "US tax dollars which are mostly laundered back to democrats"...

  • @ausitnworkman2652
    @ausitnworkman2652 16 дней назад

    Ok the removed the original tomb and are building a new one? Also isn't this in an active warzone now.

  • @jaymikesell1264
    @jaymikesell1264 8 дней назад

    So many historical inaccuracies man

  • @robertdoell4321
    @robertdoell4321 Месяц назад

    Why did not the engineers not extend the Gantry Crane Runners to go outside the shed so that the parts which are the cranes that do the work of moving highly radioactive materials and heavy equipment OUTSIDE for the majority of the time they are not doing any work and away from the radiation 24/7 365?

    • @cameroncashatt692
      @cameroncashatt692 25 дней назад

      As they do work they're going to be covered in radioactive materials. It's to keep everything inside to prevent accidental spillage

  • @gdotone1
    @gdotone1 29 дней назад

    where do you put the parts and pieces? Nuclear is not safe.

  • @Sleeper260
    @Sleeper260 17 дней назад

    Stalker 2

  • @netizencapet
    @netizencapet 5 месяцев назад +4

    I wouldn't be walking anywhere remotely near the plant without full body mega hazmat radiation protection gear at all times.

    • @GWNorth-db8vn
      @GWNorth-db8vn 23 дня назад +1

      Near the plant is the safest area. They dug up the soil and moved it, then paved the ground.

  • @testsite123-r2z
    @testsite123-r2z 6 месяцев назад +5

    A crazy bit of engineering in a proper hazardous part of the world. Does this actually fully secure the reactors?

    • @jamesbieniek8290
      @jamesbieniek8290 6 месяцев назад +1

      Nope. Just a place to work on clean up

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Месяц назад +1

      Actually yes it does seeing how the other reactors no longer exists and the pieces of the damaged reactor is sealed in and the area around the site has recovered and there are poeple living not far from it you can see the arch building from there windows

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад

      @@charlestorruella8591 u know nothing

  • @joewoodchuck3824
    @joewoodchuck3824 3 месяца назад +5

    Isn't it a little late in the game for this?

    • @njmenaceify
      @njmenaceify Месяц назад +2

      no

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад +1

      ​@@njmenaceify kinda

    • @Suiseisexy
      @Suiseisexy 26 дней назад

      In the last 20 years or so the corium finally went cold internally, now it's turning to dust for some unknown reason, we've never had any aged corium masses besides this one to study. I think they want to keep the dust in but also not have people think too hard about the idea of dust that can give you cancer with a single breath so they haven't said this except to Elephant's Foot nerds who already knew it was turning to "sand", though in reality the particle size will get a lot smaller than sand. I also heard that a lot of "The China Syndrome" formation had fallen from it's pipe base and is also turning to sand, so the behavior of the corium is evidently that of the material aging and not the conditions of a specific mass. At some point the corium may decay in a way that makes this building totally unenterable.

    • @glennhobson6459
      @glennhobson6459 25 дней назад +1

      No. This isn't something that's just sitting around, waiting to be installed. And considering the plant is going to be throwing out radioactive material for the next 20,000 years, it's still very early in the game.

    • @joewoodchuck3824
      @joewoodchuck3824 25 дней назад

      @glennhobson6459 But it should still have happened a long time ago.

  • @faalmaleine6409
    @faalmaleine6409 6 месяцев назад

    In my help Elektro business boss don't even things about xpolod .. all net safety space will be in oka

  • @garnhamr
    @garnhamr Месяц назад +2

    world record for the largest erection area?

  • @Stevonoles1
    @Stevonoles1 Месяц назад

    Way to go Soviets!

  • @alecl1102
    @alecl1102 29 дней назад +5

    If it's still unsafe to go there, how come vegetarian and animals are still there

    • @TheCommando_218
      @TheCommando_218 27 дней назад +3

      It's not unsafe to go there people do visit it it's just unsafe to be there long term there are definitely areas that can still kill you in seconds but most the area's radiation has gone down since the disaster as for the plants and animal's they've adapted to the radiation humans can't really adapt that well to it the strays and the red forest are good places to start to look at how some things adapted living in such high amounts of radiation but it's definitely not safe not unsafe the basement in the hospital for example houses some the most radioactive item's and they're all the coats the fire fighters wore during the reactor fire but areas like the city aren't as bad

    • @srvking1234
      @srvking1234 26 дней назад

      The actually found a fungus that can consume radiation. It is called Cryptococcus neoformans. It thrives in highly radioactive environments

    • @rgmtz44
      @rgmtz44 26 дней назад

      They've mutated

    • @JM-yx1lm
      @JM-yx1lm 22 дня назад

      You seriously just said that animals have adapted to radiation? Seriously? And humans can't because we're humans and they're animals? My god man. Dadgum animals are closer to the radiation than a human would be because animals are closer to the ground and eat and sleep on the ground where the radiation is highest​@@TheCommando_218

    • @Osamailyas
      @Osamailyas 21 день назад +3

      They have mutated and started using multiple pronouns

  • @slimhead666aw
    @slimhead666aw 6 месяцев назад +2

    lets hope no 1 hits its then 🙏

  • @andrewdavis2763
    @andrewdavis2763 23 дня назад

    It’s not “new” but whatever Di.k

  • @douglasphillips24
    @douglasphillips24 Месяц назад

    Super Zus dived Chernobyl last year with a cheap scuba gear after breaking ice 😂. Dude is crazy.

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Месяц назад

      And it was fake most of the videos like this are fake because you can't get that close ypu can sneak into the city but you can't go near it it's all for clout

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад

      ​@charlestorruella8591 ur fake they have tours to it

  • @Nick-or5lr
    @Nick-or5lr 6 месяцев назад +3

    When all nuclear reactors are made out of concrete and it was sealed by concrete. Why is it so much safer with a steel thin wall structure going over it and removing the concrete much safer?

    • @laura-ann.0726
      @laura-ann.0726 5 месяцев назад +1

      The Arch is there to contain, control, and limit the amount of radioactive dust that will inevitably be stirred up as the demolition of the old sarcophagus proceeds. The Arch will prevent wind from carrying this dust away from the plant site, so that it can't further contaminate the surrounding land, and it will prevent rain water from washing radioactive dust away from the site. Decommissioning what's left of the Unit 4 reactor will be the longest, most expensive clean-up of an industrial site ever, in the end likely costing at least 20 times more than to decommission obsolete "normal" commercial power reactors - "normal" meaning reactors that are still intact and have not suffered a catastrophic explosion. In a normal decommissioning, the reactor fuel, about 150 tons of uranium fuel rods in a 1,000 mWe-sized power plant, are removed and laid up in sealed casks for final disposal; the method used depending on what country we are talking about. Then there are several tens of tons of resin pellets used to demineralize the reactor coolant water. These plastic pellets are radioactive, but not nearly as much as the spent fuel itself. Finally, as the reactor containment and other auxiliary structures are demolished, there will be a few hundred tons of concrete contaminated by radioactive water that dripped onto it from leaks in pipes and valves. This concrete, and several hundred tons of pipes, valves, and other machinery that was in direct contact with reactor coolant, all has to be decontaminated and disposed of in special ways, but in a regular reactor decommissioning, these materials are all relatively easy to handle, and the techniques for safe decommissioning are well-established. In Chernobyl Unit 4's reactor explosion, huge amounts of extremely radioactive fuel, in a semi-molten state, was sprayed all over the inside of the reactor hall, contaminating all of the machinery, hundreds of miles of piping, wiring, ventilation ductwork, and millions of pounds of shattered concrete, plus a still unknown amount of soil, with high-level radioactive material. All of this has to be removed and buried somewhere, probably in deep geologic formations, and the total amount of high-level radioactive material that will need to be entombed, will be hundreds of times more than a "regular" reactor decommissioning will entail. It will probably take at least a century - 3 or 4 generations of workers - to finally and completely dig up and dispose of all of the remains of the Chernobyl Unit 4 reactor. And that's why the Arch is there, because it's going to take a very long time to clean up the mess.

    • @mikedoan4247
      @mikedoan4247 26 дней назад +1

      Its alloyed

  • @KhaNguyen-k1z
    @KhaNguyen-k1z Месяц назад

    Cong hoa xa hoi chu nghia viet nam doc lap tu do hanh phuc ngay 1/1/2005 giay to ho so mat da ky trong lich su chien tranh thua co phan co phieu lam an thua lo trong lich su chien tranh da di chet ca mot noi cut ra khoi dang nha nuoc tai viet nam the gioi am duong tren duoi trong ngoai tai viet nam the gioi giao lai cho gia dinh hoang xuan hoi huyen me hoang thi kha con de hoang xuan khoi vo hoang thi kha con de am 4 dua con de hoang xuan thao vo hoang thi kha con de hoang xuan anh dung tai xa nghi thiet huyen nghi loc tinh nghe an viet nam the gioi het

  • @olpkol
    @olpkol 6 месяцев назад +5

    Chornobyl not Chernobyl!!!

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Месяц назад +1

      HIW DO YOU KNOW DID YOU GET THAT FROM THE DICTIONARY I HATE POEPLE WHO HAVE TO CORRECT SPELLING...YOU THINK POEPLE ARE DUMB BUT IT REALLY MAKES YOU LOOM LIKE A CHILD

    • @olpkol
      @olpkol Месяц назад

      @@charlestorruella8591 this is not a question of "dictionary"!
      this is a question of truth and identity, the survival of Ukrainians - russia is now killing tens of thousands of people in ukraine because of the russian language. literally. she demands that the Russian language be included in the constitution of Ukraine!

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад

      ​@@charlestorruella8591 SHUT UP DELETE UR COMMENTS OR ILL REPORT U

    • @GracieBoyee
      @GracieBoyee 6 дней назад

      @@charlestorruella8591"people", "look"

  • @anml1969
    @anml1969 5 месяцев назад +8

    Trump is weird.

    • @joewoodchuck3824
      @joewoodchuck3824 3 месяца назад +9

      Four years of proven positive leadership is weird?

    • @InnerVisions68
      @InnerVisions68 Месяц назад +3

      That is correct, and that’s being generous

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад

      ​@@InnerVisions68 no it's not shut up trump hater

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад

      @@anml1969 TRUMPS THE BEST SHUT UP

    • @zachschendt7201
      @zachschendt7201 21 день назад

      ​@@joewoodchuck3824 Don't waste your time on these bozos. All they do is "baaa" 🐑

  • @stephenMc-b1j
    @stephenMc-b1j 6 месяцев назад +4

    If the Soviets had built a reinforced concrete dome over the reactor in the first place this would have never happened

    • @G-A-Jaxon
      @G-A-Jaxon 6 месяцев назад +12

      I’m sure no one has ever thought of this before, great contribution 👍

    • @matthewmockus138
      @matthewmockus138 5 месяцев назад +10

      Should have called u back in 86 tuff guy

    • @andrewbangsund7900
      @andrewbangsund7900 15 дней назад

      Whoa. Hindsight’s 20/20 huh?

  • @bazra19
    @bazra19 6 месяцев назад

    So, we have all this radioactive material in one place, now lets dismantle it and spread it around the country. This does not make sense to me. What happened to all the Vehicle parts ( Engines, wheels, gear-boxes, and such like ( take a look at all the scrap yards there so much has been stolen)) and shipped out to other places?

    • @chuckd5819
      @chuckd5819 6 месяцев назад +14

      let the smart people figure it out armchair quarterback

    • @ThrasherGnar
      @ThrasherGnar Месяц назад

      🤡

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 29 дней назад +1

      Tjey can de radioact it

    • @auricstorm
      @auricstorm 8 дней назад

      I think it's a little to do with the fact the core is still melting, the fact they don't know whats in there, and making sure it's somewhere "safe" (i.e. buried somewhere DEEP underground, away from all water etc)

    • @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET
      @UTTPCHICKENNUGGET 8 дней назад

      @@auricstorm its not still melting what are u own

  • @vJofsy
    @vJofsy 8 дней назад

    USA funded

  • @MrBpritch100
    @MrBpritch100 Месяц назад +1

    LMFAO. What a joke this project is. YES theory video shows this thing entirely completed and in position WELL OVER 5 years ago. Yall are a bit behind on this story and they're about a decade behind on production. 😂☠️😂☠️😂☠️😂

  • @Vamosamigo123
    @Vamosamigo123 5 месяцев назад +37

    And 20 yrs to design a small hanger on rails....😮😮😮 talk about reinventing the wheel whilst trousering vast amounts of cash in brown envelopes 😊

    • @Daniluk05
      @Daniluk05 4 месяца назад +60

      small?? are you kidding? its huge. And its not just a hangar, it has to be air-tight but movable. Wtf did you even watched the documentary?

    • @InnerVisions68
      @InnerVisions68 Месяц назад +27

      ⁠​⁠@@Daniluk05He’s a certified engineer, process auditor, and accountant. Lol. I’m impressed

    • @peterl3417
      @peterl3417 Месяц назад +16

      The technology of the time didn't allow it to be made, that's what Legasov himself said. I'm no engineer, but neither are you

    • @ThrasherGnar
      @ThrasherGnar Месяц назад

      🤡

    • @Bweanlsh
      @Bweanlsh Месяц назад +18

      Small hanger?? It's the world's largest movable land based object 😂

  • @ehsanchishti8129
    @ehsanchishti8129 6 месяцев назад +1

    Please Pray for me !
    May God accept and fufill my prayers and Wishes

    • @Vamosamigo123
      @Vamosamigo123 5 месяцев назад +3

      Why, wtf you been up to now ?? 😮😮

    • @philipmadhatter4006
      @philipmadhatter4006 Месяц назад +1

      @@Vamosamigo123touching kids again I think 😅