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-   -   Godzilla! Huge Earthquake in Japan (https://www.tribalwar.com/forums/showthread.php?t=629593)

Tantric Rex 03-14-2011 12:43

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ztir (Post 16273535)
didn't think you would

when your whole persona is a troll it's prolly hard to remember every thing you ****post about


Well it depends on what I'm ****posting about. Sometimes I remember.

Like the guitar thing. If I was trying to make you look like as ass or something I probably would have just posted something real quick and never gave it a second thought.

Thats probably why I didnt remember, I'm surprised that you held on to it for as long as you did.

JoMo 03-14-2011 12:51

I have the flu or something, so didn't read last few pages.

But the fuel rods of #2 reactor are fully exposed again.

ICMeltdown 03-14-2011 12:53

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoMo (Post 16273633)
I have the flu or something, so didn't read last few pages.

But the fuel rods of #2 reactor are fully exposed again.


Well that can't be good, where'd you read that at jomo?

JoMo 03-14-2011 12:54

Quote:

Originally Posted by ICFire (Post 16273636)
Well that can't be good, where'd you read that at jomo?

All headlines | Kyodo News

Ezlpo 03-14-2011 12:55

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoMo (Post 16273633)
I have the flu or something, so didn't read last few pages.

But the fuel rods of #2 reactor are fully exposed again.

I think this will end badly. I really though through all of this everything would work out OK. My attitude has changed however. Japan is ****ed.

JoMo 03-14-2011 12:56

Just now?

The U.S. nuclear regulatory commission says the Japanese government has formally asked the U.S. for help with cooling nuclear reactors

Got Haggis? 03-14-2011 13:12

I thought I read that they were fully exposed for a bit but then they got water back in there..it happened when a valve was closed that was letting out radioactive steam

ScooBySnaCk 03-14-2011 13:17

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoMo (Post 16273647)
Just now?

The U.S. nuclear regulatory commission says the Japanese government has formally asked the U.S. for help with cooling nuclear reactors

I hear you can cool it by dropping a bomb on it

(sorry)

ICMeltdown 03-14-2011 13:20

Well we know our navy moved the ships in the area from the downwind location they were occupying...

Pagy 03-14-2011 13:20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kerosene31 (Post 16273613)
The radiation might give you a monster godzilla penis!

We'd need a lot of radiation to achieve that...

JoMo 03-14-2011 13:21

Quote:

Originally Posted by Got Haggis? (Post 16273687)
I thought I read that they were fully exposed for a bit but then they got water back in there..it happened when a valve was closed that was letting out radioactive steam

Nope. They are uncovered as of the latest news.

Monkey_b 03-14-2011 13:26

sooo... is this turning serious? wasn't everyone like super sure that short of a worst case scenario, which in itself was highly unlikely to occur, there was nothing to worry about?

what about that article that said "they always have the option to just flood the reactors with ocean water and end the crisis immediately"? didn't it suggest that there is zero chance this can turn into a full meltdown

JoMo 03-14-2011 13:28

Quote:

Originally Posted by Monkey_b (Post 16273732)
sooo... is this turning serious? wasn't everyone like super sure that short of a worst case scenario, which in itself was highly unlikely to occur, there was nothing to worry about?

As long as the containment vessels hold, all is well. They will just have to release radioactive steam every now and then.

The fact that Japan has asked for US, French and IAEA help suggests they aren't sure what to do next.

Also, they have flooded them all with seawater, but the seawater in #2 is just boiling off as they pumps sustained damage from the #3 explosion.


There shouldn't be an explosion at #2 since the #3 explosion poked a hole in the #2 building which is allowing hydrogen to escape.

Swamp Kitten 03-14-2011 13:34

don't know if this has been posted yet

pretty :ugh:

Tide of bodies overwhelms quake-hit Japan - Yahoo! News

cliffs:
-1,000 bodies washed up on shore this morning
-crematoriums overwhelmed
-police chief in Miyagi says 10,000 people estimated to have been killed

JoMo 03-14-2011 13:38

Quote:

Originally Posted by Swamp Kitten (Post 16273758)
don't know if this has been posted yet

pretty :ugh:

Tide of bodies overwhelms quake-hit Japan - Yahoo! News

cliffs:
-1,000 bodies washed up on shore this morning
-crematoriums overwhelmed
-police chief in Miyagi says 10,000 people estimated to have been killed

Lies and hype. LGBR says it wasn't that bad and all will be back to normal because Japan was prepared for this. Who you going to believe, some journalist or people that are actually there!?

Zombie 03-14-2011 13:39

They're just bathing, everyone will be nice and clean soon.

Monkey_b 03-14-2011 13:40

i don't think lagbur is returning to this thread

Kerosene31 03-14-2011 13:47

So... bad?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jyaLZHiJJnE

Denver 03-14-2011 13:52

Japan: earthquake aftermath - The Big Picture - Boston.com
more pics could be OFN, did not browse through all pages.

Pagy 03-14-2011 13:55

Still no significant threat to people... Plus everything should be evacuated. The reaction and system is out of control but everything is still contained and no reason to think it will not be contained... Still not a great situation and the plant is ****ed up but we're still a far ways away from a disaster that would affect humans or the environment.

def 03-14-2011 13:55

wheres lgbr

Travace 03-14-2011 13:57

Quote:

Originally Posted by JoMo (Post 16273641)

Quote:

To have fuller access to the Kyodo News website, it is necessary to subscribe. We offer a broad range of subscription options depending on your needs. Learn more.
for real... they are out their god damm minds if they think im signing up just to read a news article

Special---K 03-14-2011 14:01

Quote:

Originally Posted by LGBR (Post 16265560)
they'll be just fine.

i doubt anyone will even die.


Last Activity: 03-12-2011 10:13 AM

Zombie 03-14-2011 14:14

(Reuters) - The United Nations atomic watchdog said on Monday there were no signs, at the moment, that fuel was melting at the Japanese nuclear plant stricken by a huge earthquake and tsunami.

"I think at this time we don't have any indication of fuel ...currently melting," James Lyons, a senior nuclear safety official at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), told a news conference on the situation in Japan

Walking_Man 03-14-2011 14:15

Nuclear Energy Institute - Information on the Japanese Earthquake and Reactors in That Region

welp still no catastrophe

D 03-14-2011 14:29

It never will be a catastrophe unless an outer force destroys the whole defense structure.
Even if a core would melt 100%, the material would never ever ever ever ever ever get through the concrete. It would probably not even get through the actual reactor.
Chernobyl still has over 90% of it's fuel in some solid form in the basement. It never got through.

Thingfish 03-14-2011 14:35

I know this is TW and everything, but maybe LGBR has taken enough lumps over this. He's young, imperfect and enthusiastic about Japanese culture. He made rash predictions and received his smackdown. I'm guessing there are other targets that deserve more attention. But, hey ... if you don't agree, then flame on!

Eggi 03-14-2011 14:40

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kyodo News
A crisis continued Tuesday at the troubled No. 2 reactor at the quake-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, as fuel rods became fully exposed again after workers recovered water levels to cover half of them in a bid to prevent overheating.

The plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., said steam vents of the pressure container of the reactor that houses the rods were closed probably due to the battery problem, raising fears that its core will melt at a faster pace.

The firm said it will first lower the pressure of the reactor by releasing radioactive steam and open the vents with new batteries to resume the operation to inject seawater to cool down the reactor.

Earlier, cooling functions of the reactor failed, causing water levels to sharply fall and fully exposing the fuel rods for about 140 minutes. TEPCO said they could not pour water into the reactor soon as it took time for workers to release steam from the reactor to lower its pressure, the government's nuclear safety agency said.

As TEPCO began pouring coolant water into the reactor, water levels went up at one point to cover more than half of the rods that measure about 4 meters.

Prior to the second full exposure of the rods around 11 p.m. Monday, radiation was detected at 9:37 p.m. at a level twice the maximum seen so far -- 3,130 micro sievert per hour -- near the main gate of the No. 1 plant, according to TEPCO.

The radiation amount is equivalent to reach by 20 minutes the permissible level for a person in one year.

To ease concerns, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said he believes the problem at the plant ''will not develop into a situation similar to the (1986 accident at the atomic power reactor in) Chernobyl'' in the Soviet Union, even in the worst case.

Officials of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency also said the worst case scenario will be less destructive than the Chernobyl incident, as TEPCO has depressurized the reactors by releasing radioactive steam.

The utility said a hydrogen explosion at the nearby No. 3 reactor that occurred Monday morning may have caused a glitch in the cooling system of the No. 2 reactor.

Similar cooling down efforts have been made at the plant's No. 1 and No. 3 reactors and explosions occurred at both reactors in the process, blowing away the roofs and walls of the buildings that house the reactors.

Edano denied the possibility that the No. 2 reactor will follow the same path, as the blast at the No. 3 reactor created a gap in the wall of the building that houses the No. 2 reactor. Hydrogen will be released from the space, he said.

However, TEPCO officials did not completely rule out the possibility that a blast will happen, saying hydrogen may have been accumulating while the fuel rods are exposed.

The blast earlier in the day injured 11 people but the reactor's containment vessel was not damaged, with the government dismissing the possibility of a large amount of radioactive material being dispersed, as radiation levels did not jump after the explosion.

TEPCO said seven workers at the site and four members of the Self-Defense Forces were injured in the explosion.

Since the magnitude 9.0 quake hit northeastern Japan last Friday, some reactors at the Fukushima No. 1 plant have lost their cooling functions, leading to brief rises in radiation levels.

As a result, the cores of the No. 1 and No. 3 reactors have partially melted.

TEPCO said the No. 1 and No. 2 reactors at its Fukushima No. 2 plant, which is adjacent to the No. 1 plant, have successfully cooled down to exit critical situations.

The government ordered residents within a 20-kilometer radius of the No. 1 plant to evacuate Saturday in the wake of the initial blast at the plant's No. 1 reactor. A total of 354 people are still attempting to leave the area, according to the nuclear agency.

The agency ruled out the possibility of broadening the area subject to the evacuation order for now.


Dangerdoggie 03-14-2011 14:53

Now would be a good time to eject the core(s) into deep space.

Tappy 03-14-2011 15:13

Looks like everything is completely under control.

Quote:

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said there were signs that the fuel rods were melting in all three reactors at Fukushima Daiichi.

"Although we cannot directly check it, it's highly likely happening," he told reporters.
Quote:

But the French Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) has cast doubt on Japan's classification of the crisis at Fukushima as level 4 of 7 on the International Nuclear Event Scale. Chernobyl was classified as level 7.

"Level four is a serious level," ASN chief Andre-Claude Lacoste said, but added: "We feel that we are at least at level five or even at level six."
BBC News - Japan earthquake: Meltdown alert at Fukushima reactor

Musashi 03-14-2011 15:19

In other news, we are going to be facing a shortage of tentacle porn in the coming months.

Pagy 03-14-2011 15:21

According to the definitions on wikipwdia we're still nowhere near a 5 / 6 unless they are keeping a lot of details private at this point.

Flunky 03-14-2011 15:21

Quote:

Originally Posted by Musashi (Post 16274045)
In other news, we are going to be facing a shortage of tentacle porn in the coming months.

my favorite post in this thread was the fear that new Naruto episodes wouldn't be forthcoming...

Pagy 03-14-2011 15:24

Quote:

Originally Posted by Musashi (Post 16274045)
In other news, we are going to be facing a shortage of tentacle porn in the coming months.

But the door is wide open for exciting new storylines involving tentacle beasts that are pushed from the depths into villages during a tsunami disaster.

CogitoČ 03-14-2011 15:59

What kind of volume is actually required to pump through the reactor? I wonder why it isn't feasible to have a large water tower high above the reactor so water can be drawn through passively.

Yankee 03-14-2011 16:00

their abilities to construct large water towers is slightly inhibited at the moment

Zombie 03-14-2011 16:02

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yankee (Post 16274149)
their abilities to construct large water towers is slightly inhibited at the moment

Also putting a great big heavy weight that likes to slosh around way up in the air in an earthquake prone area sounds like a good idea.

Goshin 03-14-2011 16:03

if the morons like Tappy would read the nuclear thread, they'd have seen this gem

Nuclear Crisis in Japan by Goshin - Page 4 - TribalWar Forums

nothing is ****ed, dude

/walter

Zombie 03-14-2011 16:06

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tappy (Post 16274023)
Looks like everything is completely under control.

BBC News - Japan earthquake: Meltdown alert at Fukushima reactor

That's not a linear scale.

For the 4 to become a 5 (Three Mile Island) things have to become 10 times worse.

Pagy 03-14-2011 16:06

Quote:

Originally Posted by Goshin (Post 16274160)
if the morons like Tappy would read the nuclear thread, they'd have seen this gem

Nuclear Crisis in Japan by Goshin - Page 4 - TribalWar Forums

nothing is ****ed, dude

/walter

Only moron here is the self-important one that needs his own thread.


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