Wednesday, August 8, 2012

#Fukushima I Nuke Plant Reactor 1 Balloon Survey of 5th Floor Was Unsuccessful


I had to laugh and cry, looking at the photographs of the huge, red and white balloon with cameras attached using duct tape. This is sad.

According to TEPCO's press release on 8/8/2012, the balloon couldn't pop out onto the operating floor (5th floor) because it was stopped by a cable on the 4th floor. The balloon did take photographs of the 4th floor.

The purpose of the survey (not fulfilled by this project) was to see what the 5th floor was like, in order to prepare for the future removal of fuel assemblies from the Spent Fuel Pool. (See my post from July 23, 2012.)

5 TEPCO employees and 14 affiliate company workers did the work, for about 35 minutes, receiving maximum 1.54 millisievert for the shortened work.

From TEPCO's Photos and Videos Library, 8/8/2012:

1. Investigation Outline

Purpose
The investigation was conducted to understand the current condition of Unit 1 operating floor (5th floor) and provide inputs to the consideration of fuel removal from the spent fuel pool.

Investigation items
Though the following items were planned to be investigated by utilizing a balloon equipped with a camera, the balloon was unable to reach the operation floor as it interfered with a obstacle which is assumed to be a cable.
- Current conditions of the roof debris, the overhead traveling crane and the fuel handling machine
- Accessibility from the large carry-in entrance to the equipment hatch and SFP
- Dose measurement at the equipment hatch opening on the operating floor

Members participated
TEPCO employees: 5
Members of cooperative companies: 14

Day and time of investigation
Wednesday, August 8
From 1:41 PM to 2:15 PM

Maximum radiation dose
1.54mSv (Planned dose: 5mSv)

Here's the balloon:


Balloon floating inside the hatch shaft (Photo taken from straight below the balloon):


4th floor of Reactor 1:




The tank-like structures are IC (Isolation Condenser). TEPCO workers went inside Reactor 1 building on October 18, 2011 to investigate them, braving the extremely high radiation:

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

An irony, balloon and debris, I agree what you meant.

Anonymous said...

This is a iconic example how Tepco is thinking and handling the disaster.
A balloon and duct tape... How desperate can you be?
It also shows that they have no solution and no ideas how to'fix' this. It's clearly infixable, but 'm affraid it will take a few more 'balloons and duct tape solutions' before they ( goverment and big corp. ) can/will admit it's hopeless.
In the mean time ( a few years probably ) they will try to start more nuclear reactors, to be able to keep the cashflow going to their endless deep pockets. The money is too juicy to let this just stop right now. And that's why we will see more of these actions; completely meaningless, but as long as they can keep the show going on an pretending they are 'fighting' against this disaster, the money keeps coming.
It's all about the money ( as usual ) and the bill is paid by... right, we, the people, the taxpayers, and in Fukushima and surroundings they pay the highest price... their lives.
Sad there is still not enough 'uprising' in Japan ( and the rest of the world). Every day that this continueing, is a lost day for the people of Japan and in particular for those poor souls in Fukushima.

Anonymous said...

Yesssssssssssssssssssss~~ the joys of modern technologyyy~~~ *fapfapfap*

They should let Apple handle this. They'd paint it white and seal the entire thing so that maintenance can never be done without paying Apple a gazillion dollars to replace the entire reactor. Actually, that sounds kinda similar to what they're doing right now...

By the way, I'm not hating on Apple, I'm hating on people who blind themselves to danger because they're too busy orgasming at the illusion of modern human technology. I recently realised that, despite removing important functionality, Apple's products are popular because they are simple. I think this is because people draw correlations between "futuristic" technology and simplicity, to the point that no knowledge, effort, responsibility or intelligence is required on the part of the end user.

I may have previously commented that "it's ironic how humans became intelligent, only to make themselves dumber". This is what I meant by that, and stuff like this balloon survey only reminds me of this illusion. With all the supposed advancements we have, we are still often utterly helpless. Everyone seems to whack off to the illusion that we're living the high life, when we're actually sitting on a ticking time bomb.

Everything is moving in this direction of simplicity and luxury. It's an illusion because everything behind the scenes is still complex, and in cases like nuclear tech, still dangerous. As a result of humanity striving to perpetuate this illusion, people in general are becoming less knowledgeable. It doesn't help that most people nowadays have no choice but to slave away on specific professions with virtually no time left for anything else - not even for sleeping, nor for family or for socialising. Media and specific groups pushing distrust for one other over things like race and gender doesn't help either.

I'm not sure if I've already said this, but I've considered that at some point in time, we may be faced with a worldwide disaster but lack adequate numbers of relevantly knowledgeable people. For example, the average person has absolutely no idea how nuclear tech or radiation works. If all the world's experts perished attempting to curb such a disaster, the rest of the world would be completely screwed. In a disaster, I doubt they would have time to educate new people.

With this in mind, I think there's something wrong with the widespread use of technology that the majority of the population have absolutely zero understanding of. As far as I know, none of these things are even taught in school edcation.

Anyway, uh... I just meant to write a short comment and ended up talking about various issues again. I'll just post this comment anyway, in case anyone finds it interesting or educational. My apologies for cluttering the comments with mildly unrelated matters again.

Greyhawk said...

This would be laughable if it was not so tragic. This is what happens when people worship money. The Powers That Be are blind.

Anonymous said...

Why dont they use a remote controlled vehicle like a mini Cinestar 8 for this kind of job. Japan, country of cutting edge high tech using a balloon for this operation? cmon guys. Japanese government should destroy tepco and take over his clean up opeation with international help before all japan is ruined.

Andres Arce said...

the farceur plan failed even about taking some picture of the obstacle itself

Anonymous said...

In this YouTube video from 8/10/12 you can see where the cover for reactor #4 was removed today!?!?!? I thought it was still too dangerous to do this. (keep in mind this is not the Spent Fuel Pool)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZvCiSkpwz4&feature=youtube_gdata_player

arevamirpal::laprimavera said...

Patrick, thanks for the video. I doubt that it is too dangerous, the cover is on the opposite side (diagonally) from the SFP which is covered by metal sheets.

Anonymous said...

Sorry, but I have to say, Cry at your own inadequicie. The balloon was probbly the best way ornidea anyone could have come up with. Forget robots they breakdown, have to be guided etc. The balloon was simple vand effective, and how else would you attach a camera to it. hang it underneath and the balloon has to go higher to get pics. Exactly what duct tape was designed for. The best solution is always the simplest. Perhaps one of YOU would volunteer to go up to the fifth floor and get the pics needed! You're not there , you don;t know what to do, so don;t pretend you could have a better idea. there isn;t one. Any other way is going to be more complicated or dangerous. Stephen W. Anderle

Anonymous said...

I second the comment that a balloon and duct tape is actually a pretty good first attempt to solve this problem.

Now they know it doesn't work due to obstacles, I wonder if anyone will think of the next-best idea: grenade launcher, firing a grappling hook or spear, with a pulley and cable loop attached. Then pull a camera up the cable like a flag.

TerraHertz

Anonymous said...

I am assuming that technical equipment would likely fail due to high radiation? Selfcontrolling, flying robots recently introduced in California (as reported in this blog) would otherwise have been the ideal vehicle.

If true that technical equipment either can't handle the radiation and/or would not be able to maneuver, trying the balloon was indeed a good idea.

However, what is laughable or tear-jerkily sad nonetheless is the red and white colored (next balloon maybe with smiley faces?) proof of what we are reduced to in order to deal with this marvelous nuclear technology that we claimed so confidently to have mastered and under control.
*mscharisma*

SurveyTool said...

Wow! Thanks! I've already bookmarked the site & saved a couple reports!

http://www.surveytool.com/hr-survey/

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