Quote from benwm:
I'm just puzzled at the logistics involved in managing the situation. They've got this 20km or 50km evacuation zone in place...so when the guys are not working do they wheel them out of the exclusion zone? Then when they get the wake up call, is the Japanese army/US navy whisking them back on to the site in their protective clothing?
How many guys are involved? I would guess that working at a nuclear power plant is a bit like being a nighttime security guard with a big more technical nous required - there's only 1-2 of you looking after the place, mostly reading the newspaper, watching a bit of TV, you're never really expecting to use any of the stuff in the emergency situation manual, so you never read it...
Considering the fact that the tsunami took out the water cooling pumps I wonder how these guys on site survived the tsunami? Did they have some sort of panic room bunker that survived the tsunami?
So many questions...
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I would imagine the 20-50km zone is just-in-case so people can't come back later and say they didn't do enough, should something major happen. From everything I've been able to get my hands on, right now it's a race to absorb as many neutrons to temper the reactions as possible.(hence the boron) From what I've read LWRs don't "melt down" like you think of a 80s-era cold-war soviet meltdown occurring.
Pending a nuclear blast, I'm buying tomorrow.

