Sony's the shit IMHO. You have to go into the +$60K specialty cameras to beat their systems.piss poor planning.
glad you got a cool camera. i was just down in LA hanging out with my old videographer. the shit she shot with newer sonys looked fucking fantastic.
workers? I dunno
people? all I know is about about 250k are in shelters
I know several workers were there though,
because they evacuated yesterday, and some went back today.
I hear some 'experts' saying the main problem was the water pumps.
I can understand about that, because it takes much more power to
turn a water pump with electricity than diesel, as I said.
I wonder if they are using electricity to pump the water while in active operation.
Seems something amiss with this whole situation in the design.
Never let a good crisis go to waste!
Oh, hell I forget: who was it here that used to say "the sky is falling, the sky is falling??
No I have thought about this I am fully capable of accurately answering this question.
The issue is your ignorance in many different areas.
what type of outrageously
expensive equipment would be required onsite to sink this massive load
if you were going to try to run the plant off the grid
For your next unintellectual exercise perhaps you can expound on macroeconomics?
Which is why I'm asking the question. You still haven't answered it. Bish came a lot closer. You've decided to be a smacktard. However, it's worked against you since you are still not on the same page, thus, you seem incapable of answering the question.
Neither the tsunami nor the 9 point oh magnitude quake directly created the current issue. A lack of sustainable electricity did. My question stands. why can't a power plant that is in need of a constant stable flow of power to maintain a safe & less-than-lethal atmosphere use it's own created juices?
An internal set of adjusted transformers could provide all the power needed to run the cafeteria, the office, the bathrooms & the fucking cooling mechanisms. Jesus man, it's as close as you can get to perpetual motion as possible. I don't need to understand fission to understand a power generator.
You mentioned expense. I presume you mean that the cost of having a "grounding rod" that would disipate this kind of change? Expensive? Yea. I bet it's a whole lot less than the cost of 6 reactors.
In the end, the quake started a chain reaction (no pun intended) that has an entire nuclear energy facility on the brink of becoming a dirty bomb. The men & women that are currently risking their lives are heroes. It appears they may solved this, but at what cost? A closed circuit power system, could have saved a lot of trouble. It's too late for Fuck-u-Shima but not for many others. It seems that coastal plants can't use diesel.