Here's what it looks like inside a nuclear power plant

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • Pickering Nuclear Generating Station in Ontario is one of the largest nuclear power stations in the world. CBC's Mike Crawley got a rare tour of the plant, which is off-limits to the general public.
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Комментарии • 357

  • @vn8162
    @vn8162 9 месяцев назад +212

    Engineering is absolutely beautiful

    • @viaxxl
      @viaxxl 8 месяцев назад +7

      Engineering is awesome!!!

    • @ph11p3540
      @ph11p3540 Месяц назад +1

      Science discovers new laws and loopholes in the laws of physics. The engineer exploits those loopholes and technicalities in the laws of physics. Science discovers. Engineers make what was previously impossible.

    • @veryCreativeName0001-zv1ir
      @veryCreativeName0001-zv1ir Месяц назад

      @@ph11p3540 there are no loop holes , if 1 exists you're arrived at the wrong model

  • @Alex_Plante
    @Alex_Plante Год назад +131

    I visited Pickering back in the 90s. Even though it's much smaller than Bruce, it's still very impressive.

    • @CarciaBlueSky
      @CarciaBlueSky 11 месяцев назад +1

      That is a cool,story!

    • @Redbird45
      @Redbird45 17 дней назад +1

      I live near Nine Mile and James A. Fitzpatrick Nuclear Power Station it has 2 boiling water reactors and Nine Mile unit 1 is the oldest operating reactor in the US December 1969

    • @thespiritofthenight8196
      @thespiritofthenight8196 2 дня назад

      Did you go inside

    • @Alex_Plante
      @Alex_Plante День назад +1

      @@thespiritofthenight8196 yes. It was a guided tour.

    • @thespiritofthenight8196
      @thespiritofthenight8196 День назад

      @Alex_Plante Lucky. I wish I could do that

  • @SEParksProjects
    @SEParksProjects 7 месяцев назад +9

    I've been there to the Pickering nuclear powerplant, not inside, but I still got a good view of it. even though there was a incident on December 10, 1994 and there was a loss of coolant, it's save to say that it's super dooper safe today and it has been safe for decades now.

  • @Zxarr
    @Zxarr Год назад +41

    When I was a kid, my father worked a a Draftsman at Ontario Hydro. I never saw Pickering, but Darlington was of similar design. Before Darlington was completed, all the families got a picnic and a tour. I remember seeing the 'core' and so wanted it to look space-age and cool... instead it was just a bunch of tube caps. I also remember the coolant pool well before it was filled with water. I remember seeing a soccer ball at the bottom of the pool, but memories are a funny thing, so it may not be true, just one of those weird little child-like fantasies. I mean, you'd never lose the ball!

  • @christopherleubner6633
    @christopherleubner6633 Год назад +136

    That body scanner uses a mix of argon and methane to detect radiation, sorta like a very large geiger counter tube but the gas slowly flows through it. They are very sensitive especially for beta and alpha contamination ❤

    • @Dogerules777
      @Dogerules777 5 месяцев назад +2

      lets goo we have the same name!!!!!

  • @ToGoMania19
    @ToGoMania19 Месяц назад +2

    I served on the USS Enterprise as a nuke operator in the 1970s. I still love the energy going from atoms to thermal energy on the primary side to steam in the secondary side to rotational energy to electrical energy.
    I still visit retired WW2 carriers and their engine rooms here in California when I get a chance.
    Same steam cycle on the engine room side, but a different heat source.

  • @crabbyhayes1076
    @crabbyhayes1076 9 месяцев назад +9

    I worked for one of the equipment and service vendors at the Pickering station back in the 90s for several years, prior to returning to the US. It wasn't unusual to attend back-to-back meetings at Units at opposite ends of the station. That effort would require about a half-mile walk and several scans along the way. Boy, did I lose weight. It was great working with the Ontario Hydro people - although I can't say I miss the winters.

  • @Dasycottus
    @Dasycottus Год назад +36

    Nuclear power is amazing. I wish people weren't so scared of it. It's absolutely fabulous

    • @haroldfarthington7492
      @haroldfarthington7492 Год назад +12

      the fossil fuel industry has to keep it from growing too powerful

    • @MultidimensionalSentinel
      @MultidimensionalSentinel Год назад

      Yeah, all those people who moved out of Pripyat? What were they thinking? And Fukushima, I mean seriously, it's just ionizing radiation, right?

    • @stuckinmud00
      @stuckinmud00 Год назад

      Good and bad to everything. Aside from the obvious, the only big issue still pressing is long term storage of depleted fuel. Once they have fusion figured out, it’ll be way better

    • @MultidimensionalSentinel
      @MultidimensionalSentinel Год назад +1

      @@stuckinmud00 There are plenty of other big issues with fission. Mining, refining, and manufacturing nuclear fuel has had disastrous effects of people, and ecosystems, for example.

    • @MultidimensionalSentinel
      @MultidimensionalSentinel Год назад

      @@stuckinmud00 I wish we could stop wasting trillions trying to prop up fission, it is a failed technology. We need to be funding fusion, it has been grossly underfunded for decades.

  • @runswithscissors1570
    @runswithscissors1570 9 месяцев назад +4

    You know what’s wild to think about, a lot of these technologies were discovered in the last

  • @nagasako7
    @nagasako7 Год назад +16

    I'm American, but read about Canadian CANDU reactors and how stable they are. Canada should make it national priority to use NPPs over fossil fuels. And bonus, export electricity to lower 48 U States.

    •  Месяц назад

      GE and Westinghouse will never let that happen

  • @MaverickBlue42
    @MaverickBlue42 Год назад +117

    I don't understand why people are so against building modern nuclear plants that are 3 times safer than these ancient 1960's plants, with their refurbished 1980's computer systems....

    • @missano3856
      @missano3856 Год назад +16

      CANDU's have been tremendous reactors, maybe the best. There is no problem building more reactors of this basic design.

    • @MaverickBlue42
      @MaverickBlue42 Год назад +18

      @@missano3856 Or, we could be building thorium reactors which produce far less nuclear waste, and have even less risk of nuclear meltdown...

    • @duckking404
      @duckking404 Год назад +14

      So true, these are a piece of art. People probably dislike it because it has “nuclear” in it, with things such as nuclear waste which are much more better contained than before

    • @paulanderson7796
      @paulanderson7796 Год назад +5

      @@MaverickBlue42 Whist I agree, there are other issues associated with the thorium fuel cycle. Historically has that been adopted first we'd have stuck with it. Both cycles have their own merits and demerits.

    • @paulanderson7796
      @paulanderson7796 Год назад +3

      @@duckking404 They don't create that much waste at all. There is a fortune being made from the "management" of reactor "waste". Governments are wrapped up in the same thing. Money money money

  • @vandavis000
    @vandavis000 Год назад +6

    Wow. Thanks for showing us how yall make our lives easier with power. You rock❤

  • @ronblack7870
    @ronblack7870 Год назад +11

    i was in there in 1982 when i had a summer job in the engineering dept at ontario hydro. i worked for 2 engineers and we did an inspection there to see how the new units were progressing. i think unit 6 or 7 is where i was. it was under construction . i remember having to put on tyvek booties and then walking out on top of the reactor where the control rods were . i couldn't tell you what the purpose of the tour was. also remember a pipefitter was covering some pipes with lead pipe split in half about 1 inch thick. he would cover it then solder the 2 halves together.

    • @setituptoblowitup
      @setituptoblowitup Год назад +1

      🐂💩 a solder isn't A Weld complete ant total lack of fusion⚛️💯

  • @techcafe0
    @techcafe0 Год назад +25

    i was hoping for a more extensive tour of the power plant, it was just starting to get interesting.

    • @BerlietGBC
      @BerlietGBC Год назад +3

      There is a full movie of a Indian CANDU it’s very interesting

  • @SpikeyTech
    @SpikeyTech Год назад +42

    Nuclear (fission) energy isn't perfect, but it's what we need in the meantime while we continue to research fusion energy. "Don't let perfection be the enemy of good", and nuclear is leagues better and safer than coal (don't forget, coal is radioactive too and pollutes a LOT).

    • @johnjones5354
      @johnjones5354 Год назад +2

      Cheap fusion energy is only 10 years away, just like it has been for the last 50 years.

    • @thomasmcnicholas8656
      @thomasmcnicholas8656 7 месяцев назад

      Why skip over natural gas…… not many coal fires left to be honest …… Nuclear is expensive, it’s not 100% safe nor clean nor is it that economical as many think

    • @coneplato6702
      @coneplato6702 3 месяца назад

      ​@@thomasmcnicholas8656 A single natural gas plant will produce more pollution in a year then a nuclear power plant in it's lifetime. Nuclear is absurdly clean. If you grabbed all the high level nuclear waste produced by every single reactor in the world it would fill a about football stadium unlike solar that leaves forever chemicals in the ground and wind that blend birds. Secondly it is no less economical then building other energy sources, if that was the case 70% of France would not be powered by nuclear. Now I am not energy expert and I don't plan on ever claiming such. There are much smarter people then me that can explain why fission energy is vastly superior to other energy types in a far better and more coherent way. A recommendation of mine would be Kyle Hill for more information though there are plenty of others.

    • @Temperius
      @Temperius 27 дней назад

      Nuclear is miles better than coal and somewhat better than other renewables in some betters

    • @Temperius
      @Temperius 27 дней назад

      @@thomasmcnicholas8656 Natural gas is good but its not perfect.

  • @rollingthunderinho
    @rollingthunderinho 8 месяцев назад +5

    Canada has world class nuclear tech and safety. As a result Ontario has an 90% emission free grid! We must continue to support nuclear to prevent climate change.

  • @JonathanFisherS
    @JonathanFisherS Год назад +58

    This is truly the only clean unlimited energy source! Imagine greenhouses that could heat and cool themselves in any place on the earth or unlimited water desalination!

    • @xXYannuschXx
      @xXYannuschXx Год назад +10

      "This is truly the only clean unlimited energy source!"
      1. We have a VERY finite amount of fissile material that can be used for nuclear fission reactors on this planet.
      2. Its still the most expensive source of energy we have, especially with modern safety standards.
      We either find a way to have cheap fusion reactors (where we have thousands of years of fuel on our planet) or we need to continue to expand renewables.

    • @kneckebrod5721
      @kneckebrod5721 Год назад +12

      ⁠@@xXYannuschXxusing nuclear reprocessing and breeder reactors we have a very long-term fuel source, possibly thousands of years. historically nuclear power has been as cheap or cheaper than coal, but only now that construction is getting more expensive due to the global economic downturn is the price climbing higher. this is still only an initial cost

    • @cannack
      @cannack Год назад

      @@xXYannuschXx fusion is the future yes, and the recent advances with tokomaks has cemented my belief in that.
      Thing is, its still EASILY 20, likely 30-50 years until it is a significant, widespread reality. these machines require much greater auxiliary infrastructure.
      And fuel is not running low, Canada sits on a radioisotope goldmine. CANDU runs straight natural uranium (99.3% u 233), a max load they`ll swap out 5500 fuel bundles per year, 1100 pellets each about 20 grams, like 120 tonnes of oxide per year. estimates of U208 reserves alone exceed 700,000 metric tonnes
      CANDU and other reactors also produce the tritium fusion reactors NEED to function. Fusion is coming for sure, but safe nuclear is viable now, and arguably necessary less we discover a biblical deposit of tritium.

    • @ThatJay283
      @ThatJay283 Год назад +4

      exactly. gen 4+ reactor designs producing their own fissile materials will be huge. all of that valuable energy still locked up in dry cask storage will be repurposed and actually useful again for so much longer.

    • @MultidimensionalSentinel
      @MultidimensionalSentinel Год назад +6

      Ask the people of Fukushima and Chernobyl how clean it is, or perhaps the hundreds of thousands of people affected by the environmental disasters of uranium mining, or Plutonium reprocessing?

  • @ShooterMcNut
    @ShooterMcNut Год назад +2

    Really refreshing to see such care taken, I realize why, but it seems like maintenance and taking care of equipment and staff have taken a backseat to profits across industries.

  • @legitbeans9078
    @legitbeans9078 Год назад +2

    Okay but where is the safety technician working in sector 7-G? I wanted some input from that particular individual.

  •  Год назад +1

    People come from all over the world to study the Canadian nuclear program as it's efficiency and safety record is second to none.....

  • @renj6531
    @renj6531 7 месяцев назад +3

    3:00 looks like the control room of the starship enterprise except its not a prop

  • @RobbertsTravelGuides
    @RobbertsTravelGuides Год назад +7

    Nuclear Energy is so damn facinating. Sure it leaves a negative taste on the mouth when you think of accidents. but it can be so damn amazing and beautiful and for its time its absolutely still high tech!

    • @kenholt3859
      @kenholt3859 Год назад +1

      If Chernobyl's any guide, it leaves a metallic taste in your mouth ;)

    • @420sakura1
      @420sakura1 Год назад

      @@kenholt3859that was a special case. And we iearnrd from it and put safety to not let it happen again.

    • @antonis476
      @antonis476 Год назад

      ​@@kenholt3859good joke, not great not terrible

  • @CawfeeGasBlast
    @CawfeeGasBlast Год назад +5

    Is that guy in the yellow suit named Darth Vader...from the planet Vulcan ?

  • @ericm1430
    @ericm1430 Год назад +40

    a CBC video without comments disabled, thats different.

    • @CarciaBlueSky
      @CarciaBlueSky 11 месяцев назад

      That is what I would imagine!

  • @ghostmasterson5446
    @ghostmasterson5446 Год назад

    Nice video! Passed my 2nd class power engineer's exam in October. 🎉😂 👍

  • @robertedwards7695
    @robertedwards7695 Год назад +2

    Amazing! What was that switch for? No not that one. Yes that one.😮 .

  • @PaulSalmon-x9e
    @PaulSalmon-x9e 3 месяца назад

    Brilliant stuff.

  • @dylanc9174
    @dylanc9174 Год назад +35

    Yes, now build more.

  • @tonyjabrony7025
    @tonyjabrony7025 Год назад +7

    The real unsung heros are those who pick up materials for the lab

    • @stonedeprado8101
      @stonedeprado8101 Год назад

      What job title would that be

    • @christopherleubner6633
      @christopherleubner6633 Год назад +1

      Yup getting samples of the gas emissions, primary and secondary loop boiler water in order to detect problems very early on. ❤

    • @patjohnston4047
      @patjohnston4047 Год назад +2

      ​@@christopherleubner6633Ever changed out the filters from the reactor core while all your body alarms are going off and your supervisor tells you to keep going? 😂

    • @christopherleubner6633
      @christopherleubner6633 Год назад +1

      @patjohnston4047 yup when they start beeping is a bit scary, but they do tell the rate and have a timer to let you know how long you have to medium rare.🤪

  • @shankarbalakrishnan2360
    @shankarbalakrishnan2360 6 месяцев назад

    Stainless steel and uranium work well together❤❤🎉🎉

  • @wolfcatsden
    @wolfcatsden Год назад

    I wish someone would find footage of inside Douglas Point as its going to be gone soon as they are decommissioning it. being the first and start of it all for the bruce site it would be nice for history a record of it

  • @improvisedsurvival5967
    @improvisedsurvival5967 2 месяца назад

    We got a plant at the dump that burns methane from the dump pile to generate electricity. I talked to guy in the shoo there one day when I was delivering materials. He said that it will never run out of methane. This sounds like the best source of fuel to make electricity to me. Trash is the way to go

  • @R7Romeo
    @R7Romeo Год назад

    Thats wild. But that was a fantastic walk thru of your facility.

  • @phalanx9005
    @phalanx9005 Год назад +1

    Nuclear power is genuinely the way forward. The phasing out of fossil fuels and replacement of it with nuclear and renewables should be the world's priority.

  • @deancutchaw6872
    @deancutchaw6872 23 дня назад

    When did they institute control room badging in? Haven't been to PNGS in 9 years. Just curious.

    • @mcbridewins
      @mcbridewins 23 дня назад

      After covid

    • @deancutchaw6872
      @deancutchaw6872 22 дня назад

      Wasn't aware. Left Darlington in 2021. Was at PNGS until 2015.

  • @Greysquirrel98
    @Greysquirrel98 Год назад +16

    Imagine discovering how to split the ATOM, the very thing that holds the universe together, and using it to boil water.

    • @adamk203
      @adamk203 Год назад +9

      Coincidentally, water just so happens to be one of the best possible working fluids out there, and it's available to us in abundance.

    • @haroldfarthington7492
      @haroldfarthington7492 Год назад +1

      Nearly every power source in history

    • @NoTraceOfSense
      @NoTraceOfSense Год назад

      best way to generate electricity is with a generator
      best way to turn a generator is with a steam turbine
      best way to make steam is nuclear energy

    • @Pfromm007
      @Pfromm007 Год назад +3

      Water is known as the universal solvent for good reason.
      The fact that it can act as effective shielding while at the same time facilitating a controlled and sustained fission reaction makes it the best possible moderator.

  • @therandomytchannel4318
    @therandomytchannel4318 Год назад +8

    I visited a natural gas power station and the turbine hall was so loud, we wore ear protection in there, but it sure was interesting, at the time 🙂

  • @Jeff-lf4hy
    @Jeff-lf4hy Год назад +4

    Excellent work

  • @thomasmcnicholas8656
    @thomasmcnicholas8656 7 месяцев назад

    A huge issue in this country is the age of our reactor fleet……. Vogtle in Georgia is the newest an 1114 megawatt reactor…..and youngest of the nations fleet I believe

  • @placeholdername0000
    @placeholdername0000 Год назад +1

    Recomission unit 2 and 3!

  • @ShivakumarNagaraja-sy9xw
    @ShivakumarNagaraja-sy9xw Год назад

    Hatsoff

  • @steelcityspeedshopj.r6942
    @steelcityspeedshopj.r6942 Год назад

    What a job ❤

  • @StevenLandskroener
    @StevenLandskroener Год назад +4

    Surprised they let you into the Control Room of an active reactor and not a Simulator Control room.

    • @robsyoutube
      @robsyoutube Год назад +1

      Especially showing off how much windows is in place of dumb terminals. You could see a number of icons on the screen as well for anyone scouting out for end of life software if they are planning a cyber attack. Really risky.

    • @jamespowell7302
      @jamespowell7302 Год назад +7

      @@robsyoutube Hard to beat an air gap for security...

    • @robsyoutube
      @robsyoutube Год назад

      Stuxnet sure did, so did flame. All because their adversary knew what hardware and software to expect from a very foolishly proud Iranian government. @@jamespowell7302

  • @Circuitsmd
    @Circuitsmd 2 месяца назад +1

    Do a generator produce electricity or an alternator?

    • @ahslanabanana
      @ahslanabanana Месяц назад +1

      nearly all turbine generators produce 3-phase AC, so they are alternators and they produce electricity

  • @frostystoneman3273
    @frostystoneman3273 6 месяцев назад

    So cool

  • @h.r.hufnstuf4171
    @h.r.hufnstuf4171 Месяц назад +1

    I cant believe they let Homer work in one of these.

  • @yooper8778
    @yooper8778 Год назад

    Bravo!

  • @just_some_internet_guy
    @just_some_internet_guy Год назад

    A great friend to me, Lorne Haacke, once worked there. Anyone know him?

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorth Год назад +1

    CANDU reactors are truly the best designed and most durable type of nuclear power program that exists and if this country truly wants to get itself off fossil fuels it would reinvest heavily in this program... Refurbish all the existing reactors and open new ones using the CANDU Monark 1000 design... Each reactor can produce 1 GW of baseload power which is awesome in its size and scope... I urge the federal and provincial governments to not only work together on this but also to sell these reactors to places like the USA which need new clean power sources and ways to get ride of their nuclear waste stockpile... Something CANDU reactors can do quite well!

  • @davidfalconer8913
    @davidfalconer8913 Год назад

    Atomic energy establishments are quite awesome to work in ! ( AEA , near Didcot , UK ) ...... DAVE™🛑

  • @elgoog7830
    @elgoog7830 Год назад +4

    Why they store those turbine shafts like that? A crankshaft from a diesel or gasoline engine, needs to be stored standing straight up and down. Gravity will make it bend in the middle.
    Or am I missing something?

    • @stuckinmud00
      @stuckinmud00 Год назад +1

      They’re usually on stands that keep them continuously rotating at a very low speed to prevent sagging. These ones don’t appear to be, and I’m not sure why. Possibly just very short term storage before they’re moved out for refurbishment

  • @jamesdelcol3701
    @jamesdelcol3701 9 месяцев назад

    I think we can do a lot with miniature nuclear technology. This is going to be great. We can do great things with the smaller reactors. There are prototypes being developed. And they aren't as dangerous.
    Not to stop the big ones from being built better, safer by fixing existing reactors and advancing the technology. They can make this very economical. Electric cars, high speed rails and nuclear energy maybe what we do reducing the need for so much fossil fuels from use. We can drop the usage down or change how we refine it. They are working with all the data.
    I think we are close to a revolution with nuclear technology that may add to our power grid in a big way. And I believe they are one discovery away from this being something that fills our power grids nationwide.
    All kinds of other technology will advance. I hope I live long enough to see what is going to happen. Fascinating! Hydro tech, wind tech, solar tech, nuclear tech. Computer AI tech can be designed to warn people and offer information in real-time to fix all problems with a nuclear reactor. AI will not take jobs here, it will solve complex problems and assist technicians so that it is never dangerous. It can be built so that it is never dangerous with AI integral to the system to monitor every mechanical process. It is going to be the safest and cleanest energy source in the future. We need it.

  • @rickyandersson5203
    @rickyandersson5203 6 месяцев назад +1

    Very disturbing background music though.

  • @andrewDalina
    @andrewDalina Год назад

    Never forget about safety. Use Softgle Comfort

  • @afzaalahmad547
    @afzaalahmad547 Год назад

    Fascinating

  • @firedogman2280
    @firedogman2280 Год назад +3

    Btw, not every plant is like this, some plants allow you to see the reactor, while others don't. It's a design thing

  • @rastyrebwar784
    @rastyrebwar784 Год назад +2

    The control room looks like 80s

  • @setituptoblowitup
    @setituptoblowitup Год назад +1

    Yes that's cool I want to see the molaculs come apart⚛️👾

  • @muhammadawisabdshahadan1117
    @muhammadawisabdshahadan1117 Год назад

    Boleh cuba nuclear di Indonesia/sabah/sarawak kesannya👍🎉🥳

  • @patjohnston4047
    @patjohnston4047 Год назад +2

    I wonder how often the plant has to do a full blown sq meter survey.

  • @wythetrumpet6419
    @wythetrumpet6419 7 месяцев назад

    This is the intelligent future of electric power generation. While there will still be some hydroelectric power. As coal and natural gas go off line they simply cannot be replaced by solar and wind. Nuclear is where its at!!!

  • @gam3kid
    @gam3kid 3 месяца назад

    I wonder what simulator training

  • @azmrblack
    @azmrblack Год назад +7

    Nuclear power is going to be one of the necessary things in the future - we can't generate enough electricity using natural methods like wind, water and solar Your only option left without carbon pollution is Nuclear, and with more and more electrical demand, well...

  • @CawfeeGasBlast
    @CawfeeGasBlast Год назад +2

    No large sign stating 'DONT BE A HOMER !' ???

    • @mcbridewins
      @mcbridewins 23 дня назад

      Lol there's actually a bunch of simpsons safety related signs around the plant

  • @Different_Banana1977
    @Different_Banana1977 8 месяцев назад

    Best job I ever had, I miss working there

    • @belabedmyr
      @belabedmyr 7 месяцев назад

      average salary?

  • @Dirtydollars020
    @Dirtydollars020 Год назад

    I’m a boiler operator trying to figure out how to get involved in this

    • @stuckinmud00
      @stuckinmud00 Год назад +1

      Just wait for a posting. They occasionally look for nuclear operators. Thats where you start. Few years of training and you can work your way up to an ANO (authorized nuclear operator) who is in the control room directly looking after a unit.

  • @BioPhys92
    @BioPhys92 8 месяцев назад

    Cool vid, but where was Homer?

  • @rafaelnerymendonca
    @rafaelnerymendonca Год назад

    how about make nuclear fucion with sounds wave like direnet frequency

  • @seanrrichards
    @seanrrichards Год назад +4

    Show MORE!!!!

  • @gus91340
    @gus91340 Год назад

    Engineering Marvel!👏🏻

  •  Месяц назад

    Canada was one of the countries on the Manhattan project and could have easily became a nuclear power in Nato but chose not to be

  • @subr0ck1
    @subr0ck1 23 дня назад

    Can you put your ear plugs in, thanks!!

  • @PraveenSen-nt2ez
    @PraveenSen-nt2ez 7 месяцев назад

    0:14 0:170:27 0:27

  • @ATF1985
    @ATF1985 28 дней назад +1

    We need more nuclear power and update old ones in America

  • @timpies6592
    @timpies6592 6 месяцев назад

    Interesting fact; the Union Flag at 3:26 is upside down.

  • @AsandaShezi-bz1dr
    @AsandaShezi-bz1dr 3 месяца назад

    Wonderful 😭😭😭😭😭

  • @randomrazr
    @randomrazr Год назад +1

    thumbnail looked like backrooms video

  • @zeke5491
    @zeke5491 8 месяцев назад

    I thought there would be more donuts😅

  • @Ryzen7-x9h
    @Ryzen7-x9h Год назад +2

    The control room still analog and does not have any cams

  • @jonnyirvine8716
    @jonnyirvine8716 Год назад

    Jezz I’d find it pretty boring in the control room just sitting looking at buttons & leds for hours

  • @yugc7395
    @yugc7395 11 месяцев назад

    Back room?

  • @Lee2k4
    @Lee2k4 9 месяцев назад

    So was it figured out that this energy could be harnessed to make electricity first or to make a bomb?

    • @mismis3153
      @mismis3153 17 дней назад

      Probably electricity first, since radioactivity was discovered a long time before splitting the atom.

  • @bitlong4669
    @bitlong4669 6 месяцев назад

    Where’s the az-5 switch ;)

  • @StockMalthiel
    @StockMalthiel 7 месяцев назад

    So here is where Hulk, Dr Manhattan and Captain américa were created

  • @andyfeimsternfei8408
    @andyfeimsternfei8408 9 месяцев назад

    1980s (mostly 50s) control technology still used because the antinuke people won't let the industry modernize. They are responsible for almost all nuclear accidents.

  • @Henrik.S8
    @Henrik.S8 Год назад

    Now I know who Ronny Pickering is

  • @xiv3r
    @xiv3r Год назад

    Interesting

  • @taylorozbourne2052
    @taylorozbourne2052 11 месяцев назад

    I'm here because of homer simpson 😂😂😂

  • @rationalmkr1467
    @rationalmkr1467 Год назад

    There should be college or university providing this type of knowledge informing nuclear program, build a university

  • @cher4500
    @cher4500 Год назад

    What if they are exposed and they were sent to there doctor's etc. Could raidation be on anything they carry home also? If they never would tell them what there radiation levels was. Why would they not?

    • @stuckinmud00
      @stuckinmud00 Год назад

      You get exposed daily, but extremely low levels and you wear dosimetry gear to keep a close count on your intake both total and rate. It’s damn near impossible to take anything radioactive home. You stand in so many monitors both on the way in and the way out of the building that are so sensitive that radon will set them off. I’ve been stuck waiting for radiation protection to come check me out from setting off the monitors just from being rained on outside a bit. The rain will alarm for radon. They’re wildly sensitive and accurate.

  • @Towersfam43232
    @Towersfam43232 Год назад +1

    The moment you upgrade to digital problems will likely arise

    • @mismis3153
      @mismis3153 17 дней назад

      Yeah radiation and electronics don't mix well, but there are most definitely work arounds.

  • @2enthusiast4
    @2enthusiast4 5 месяцев назад

    Wow I wonder if this is similar to the Philippine nuclear plant. If so, what a massive wasted opportunity since this looks to be running great.

  • @analogueoverdigital929
    @analogueoverdigital929 Месяц назад

    We need more nuclear power. Especially with the advent of all this EV madness. It's just a fact. We also need about 100 years worth of new transmission lines.

  • @josephchristopherdavissr.6804
    @josephchristopherdavissr.6804 10 дней назад

    Science!

  • @caseyblair2341
    @caseyblair2341 7 месяцев назад +1

    3.6 roentgen: not great, not terrible

    • @CKM-gf3ik
      @CKM-gf3ik Месяц назад

      Get the good meter out of the safe and check it again.

  • @codyshadzik1179
    @codyshadzik1179 Год назад +1

    What happens if the power goes out there

    • @FridayNightFilmsCA
      @FridayNightFilmsCA Год назад +4

      There's a video form the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission on RUclips that discribes a station blackout situation. Basically the reactor will shut down, and because of the passive designs of CANDU it will basically just chill out. Worse case they have to use fire trucks to keep the massive pool of water the reactor sits in full but do to the volume of water it will take a long time and natural circulation of the pool will it cool for a reasonably long time.
      The downside of this design is it's pretty expensive but it's pretty genius thinking. "CNSC total station backout"

    • @derpymcderpello5381
      @derpymcderpello5381 Год назад

      Diesel generators keep the pumps running for any

    • @romer-cd4il
      @romer-cd4il Год назад

      The sites I’ve seen have had multiple redundant off site power sources, then twice as many permanently installed emergency diesel generators as needed with fuel to run for days at full load, then several portable diesel generators stored in separate buildings on site just in case the permanent ones get damaged. Then there are also large battery banks for the most critical components necessary to cool the reactor. Finally, there are multiple facilities in the country that keep emergency generators and other equipment on hand constantly ready to be airlifted to any nuclear site suffering a major disaster.

  • @andubyanduby2604
    @andubyanduby2604 Год назад +1

    Why are reactor 6 and 8 such similar colors? Seems like that could lead to a mistake

    • @ependergrass
      @ependergrass Год назад

      I noticed that too, and right after mentioning unit 5 was pink to avoid errors 😂

  • @jorgeraymason
    @jorgeraymason 10 месяцев назад

    These guys work for the Lethal Company

  • @mijarulhak2040
    @mijarulhak2040 9 месяцев назад

    Good

  • @peterectasy2957
    @peterectasy2957 2 месяца назад

    what i am extremely scared of, when they move spent fuel from reactor