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Chernobyl GB Feeler.

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  • Member since
    March 2010
  • From: New Zealand
Posted by Scorpiomikey on Monday, December 27, 2010 2:24 PM

Thanks yardbird. thats an awe inspiring photo isnt it?

For this GB i will need a co-host for it to go ahead. either that or i wait for a while until some of my other ones have finished.

"I am a leaf on the wind, watch how i soar"

Recite the litanies, fire up the Gellar field, a poo storm is coming Hmm 

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  • Member since
    October 2006
  • From: Albany, New York
Posted by DrWind on Tuesday, January 4, 2011 10:29 PM

Love the idea.  I remember walking in the rain in Chicago, Illinois several days after the incident wondering if there was fallout coming down. 

I've got several Amodel helicopters in 1:72 scale that would be my focus for this. Would be interesting to consider some forced perspective for a diorama.

This site might be of interest to some thinking about this build: http://www.kiddofspeed.com/default.htm

 

 

 

Group Build (Shiver Me Timbers):

1:200 Trumpeter Arizona, 0% complete

1:700 3 Flight Deck Akagi, 10% complete

  • Member since
    January 2006
  • From: California
Posted by SprueOne on Tuesday, January 4, 2011 10:46 PM

interesting subject 

watching the movie STALKER has some resemblance 

 

 

Tags: stalker

Anyone with a good car don't need to be justified - Hazel Motes

 

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  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Friday, January 14, 2011 4:46 AM

Chernobyl- Man, When Ivan screws up, he really does a 1st-class job of it...

  • Member since
    November 2010
  • From: New York
Posted by I_AM_THE_GREATEST on Friday, January 14, 2011 5:49 AM

awful disaster. If i remember, i think i saw a pic with some BMPs near a pond. It is really scary to think about this topic. Heres a fact: today the nearby town of Pripyat is about as radioactive as the reactor itself! I have been studying the Chernobyl disaster for about a year and have learned many things. There were about 50,000 people evac'd from Pripyat

The Beatles Are Dying In The Wrong Order: Pretty Soon Were Going To Be Stuck With Ringo! 

 

  • Member since
    March 2010
  • From: New Zealand
Posted by Scorpiomikey on Friday, January 14, 2011 6:57 PM

I_AM_THE_GREATEST

awful disaster. If i remember, i think i saw a pic with some BMPs near a pond. It is really scary to think about this topic. Heres a fact: today the nearby town of Pripyat is about as radioactive as the reactor itself! I have been studying the Chernobyl disaster for about a year and have learned many things. There were about 50,000 people evac'd from Pripyat

Whats really scary is there are still whole communities living in the no go zone.

"I am a leaf on the wind, watch how i soar"

Recite the litanies, fire up the Gellar field, a poo storm is coming Hmm 

My signature

Check out my blog here.

  • Member since
    June 2008
  • From: Iowa
Posted by Hans von Hammer on Saturday, January 15, 2011 8:49 AM

Yeah, but you have to remember that when it comes to what they say is is the limit, vs what rad-levels you can absorb and still survive  is really safe-sided..   Decay rate for gamma radiation is pretty constant, and if you follow the "7-10 Rule", you'll see that it's as bad as made out to be...

The "7-10 Rule " is that for every seven-fold increase in time, there's a ten-fold decrease in the rad-level (This applies to Gamma and Neutron Radiation, BTW) and that's the good news.. If the Gama ray level is say, 100,000 cGy (Centigrays, same value as RADs,, or Radiation Absorbed Dose) per hour at H-1 (That's one hour after the burst), at H+49 (a seven-fold increase in time), the dose-rate will be 10,000 cGy per hour  (a ten-fold decrease in radiation)...  

.. Gamma rays pass through objects and keep going, in a straight line, while Neutron, even though they're the only type of rays that will make other things radioactive, will be blocked (and absorbed), and these are the really bad ones.. However, Neutron particles are formed by a nuclear detonation, from either type of weapon, fission or fusion, and although they can be formed at a reactor, they don't have the concentrations that are considered lethal unless you're right AT the reactor location... They don't travel well as fallout. and are generally absorbed by things around the emitters... 

 Fallout, which is basically dust & dirt with particles attached to them, is more hazardous as a source of Alpha and Beta partcles, and Alpha particles are an inhalation or ingestion hazard, since they're blocked by the skin, and their range is only about 2-4 centimeters and can't get through a layer of skin and fat cells....  Beta particles cause radiation injuries to the skin, or internal organs if ingested or inhaled (Beta Burns)...

But in a nutshell, the rad-levels are set really high, becasue they're dangerous eventually, no matter how low the dose-rate is, and 60, 70, or 80 years later, you die from melanoma or something...  But at least you won't glow in the dark...

 

 

  • Member since
    May 2009
  • From: Poland
Posted by Pawel on Saturday, January 15, 2011 7:19 PM

There's the Chem Sarge online!

Hans, as you wrote, they went on the safe side, especially because many of the soviet safety norms (for example electromagnetic field intensity) are a lot more strict than they used to be in the west. So for example the concentrations of radioactive particles in the evacuated areas are sometimes lower than in some parts of the world where they can be observed naturally. It's also interesting to observe what happened to the environment in the evacuated area - when all the people were gone, first a huge rat infestation was observed. Then the rat population has stabilized, because it attracted a lot of animals feeding on the rats. Currently, on the evacuated area you have a lot of wild animals, in many cases representants of species thought to be almost extinct. Here's a photo for you - the wild horses and the reactor. Do they look mutated?

Chernobyl and the wildlife

From what I read the relocation of people broke more lives (depression, alcoholism) than the radiation itself. Many people tent to exaggerate the effects of radiation, but it's a bit like temperature - a lot of temperature will get you fast. But slightly higher than normal can even be good in cases, as long as you don't overdo, and it's easy to do. We have a professor in Poland who has proven that SLIGHT increase in radiation level reduces the number of certain cancer cases in a population.

In any case the area around Chernobyl is fascinating. Thanks for reading and have a nice day

Paweł

All comments and critique welcomed. Thanks for your honest opinions!

www.vietnam.net.pl

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