• KittyCat@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Sooooo… They performed routine eol maintenance on their steam turbines and that is news worthy why?

    • skankhunt42@lemmy.ca
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      21 minutes ago

      OPP (Ontario Police) pulled over someone for speeding 2 days ago. Kind of surprising I haven’t seen the article yet.

    • 0x0@infosec.pub
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      5 hours ago

      Headline says working reactor and article says

      It had been shut down since March 2023

    • d5273@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      “Routine maintenance successfully completed,” kinda feels like uplifting news at this point.

  • Deebster@infosec.pub
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    14 hours ago

    Bruce Power cut into the roof of an operating nuclear station, hauled eight steam generators weighing 100 metric tons each (about 110 US tons) out through the top, and lowered brand-new ones into the same hole. Then it brought the reactor back online on June 8, according to Bruce Power, seven months ahead of schedule.

    I was picturing some burly Aussie-Canadian lumberjack called Bruce Power doing all this without breaking a sweat.

  • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    That description is like the type of thing I’d say, and other people would tell me how wrong I am.

    “Just cut a hole in the roof, and get some machinery to lift the generators out, and then drop new ones in. Easy peasy!”

    “It doesn’t work like that! It’s not legos. You can’t just snap a new one in the old spot like plug and play!”

    “Why not?”

    “Because these are highly sensitive nuclear reactors where small mistakes kill a whole city! These things weigh 100 tons EACH!!!”

    “I’m sure it’ll be fiiiiiiiiine!”

    And I’d be called an idiot for thinking you could just do this. Yet, in this timeline I never had this EXACT conversation, so I can’t say I was “right”, but I can totally see me having this conversation and being told I was wrong.

    People always think I’m wrong, and that you can’t do things just because they aren’t regularly done.

    My current thought is that if America wanted to absolutely dominate the globe in terms of GDP, they would install solar panels all along the nevada desert. All that prime solar space is being wasted.

    Plop down a few million solar panels, and you could generate enough energy for the entire planet.

    The bottleneck wouldn’t be creating power. The bottleneck would be distributing it.

    But you could easily put something big and important in the middle of the desert. Something that consumes more energy than you can imagine.

    I’m thinking like a 2,000 foot tall voltron mech which is all electric, and powered by solar.

    Then if we go to war, you just send these massive mechs. No atomic bomb needed. It just flattens the city, and comes home. Recharges, and goes back out. All they do is switch it’s batteries.

    What they going to do? Shoot missles at Voltron? Those missles won’t even dent the armor.

    The only reason we don’t have voltron is because the solar power needed would spur a solar explosion, and everyone would be getting solar. Then power utilities wouldn’t make money.

    So we don’t have Voltron because Thomas Edison’s ghost is still a capitolist.

    • Zahille7@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      By that logic these billionaires and AI companies should be putting their data centers in the ocean or something, completely submerged and water-cooled. But that would be too expensive, and have the awful side effect of actually being somewhat beneficial to the general populace, and we can’t be having nice things around here. /S

      We should absolutely be putting solar panels on every single building in Nevada, Arizona, and probably Utah too. I keep telling anyone who will listen that the Vegas Strip could be completely self-sufficient in terms of electricity if each casino just covered their roofs in solar panels.

      • PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.social
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        39 minutes ago

        They actually are putting data centers underwater now. Turns out having them sealed and pumped full of nitrogen lengthens the service life of the equipment considerably.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    Just that you know: they do not cut open the actual reactor. They cut open the engine house (or however it is called in Canada), which houses generators and turbines running on a non-radioactive steam circuit. The engine house is the usually rectangular building next to the actual reactor, the building where all the power lines originate from.