Message from @Lucienne d'Anwyl

Discord ID: 610692821493612565


2019-08-13 04:33:36 UTC  

Nuclear waste disposal is as good as anything.

2019-08-13 04:33:38 UTC  

wanna guess my field?

2019-08-13 04:33:42 UTC  

plus they have to transport all of the kilotons of shit in there

2019-08-13 04:33:44 UTC  

no

2019-08-13 04:33:51 UTC  

not as good as nuclear fusion

2019-08-13 04:34:04 UTC  

technically speaking

2019-08-13 04:34:08 UTC  

@shrikeclaw - I'm guessing male prostitute? Twink? Femboy?

2019-08-13 04:34:12 UTC  

we dont even strictly need storag

2019-08-13 04:34:17 UTC  

we could just recycle the fuel

2019-08-13 04:34:21 UTC  

but fusion is fantasy

2019-08-13 04:34:23 UTC  

Nigga has rocks as his pfp so I'm going with geology

2019-08-13 04:34:23 UTC  

its too cost prohibitive tho

2019-08-13 04:34:26 UTC  

nah, break your heart, right?

2019-08-13 04:34:41 UTC  

spot on, samaritan

2019-08-13 04:34:43 UTC  

again yes all of those factors are a function of a 1950s design

2019-08-13 04:34:43 UTC  

Professional Stay At Home Son

2019-08-13 04:34:46 UTC  

Fucking boom

2019-08-13 04:35:00 UTC  

a modern reactor doesn't have to have those drawbacks

2019-08-13 04:35:08 UTC  

another advantage of molten salts

2019-08-13 04:35:11 UTC  

some of my classmates worked there

2019-08-13 04:35:14 UTC  

a modern reactor still produces waste dude

2019-08-13 04:35:20 UTC  

and molten salts dont exist

2019-08-13 04:35:23 UTC  

lol

2019-08-13 04:35:23 UTC  

How many modern reactors are there, what is the grade A example we should all look to

2019-08-13 04:35:35 UTC  

there are modern reactors all over the world

2019-08-13 04:35:39 UTC  

but none of them are molten salt

2019-08-13 04:35:43 UTC  

so dont worry about it

2019-08-13 04:35:49 UTC  

molten salts DO exist, the reactor design has just not be built full scale

2019-08-13 04:35:53 UTC  

most modern reactors just have vastly improved safety designs

2019-08-13 04:36:09 UTC  

yes meaning they have the same fundamental flaws

2019-08-13 04:36:12 UTC  

@Lucienne d'Anwyl - Salt melts when it gets hot.

That's literally a principle behind several nuclear power plant and energy storage designs. Dump enough heat into the salt to make it melt, and it becomes a viscous liquid that can be moved around.

2019-08-13 04:36:16 UTC  

same fuel cycle

2019-08-13 04:36:21 UTC  

you know mananimal

2019-08-13 04:36:26 UTC  

same closed loop water coolant design

2019-08-13 04:36:26 UTC  

what else exists in testing?

2019-08-13 04:36:28 UTC  

halite Melting point 800.7°C

2019-08-13 04:36:29 UTC  

fusion reactors

2019-08-13 04:36:35 UTC  

i wouldnt say fusion reactors exist tho

2019-08-13 04:36:36 UTC  

good luck with that

2019-08-13 04:36:43 UTC  

as any kind of useful thing lol

2019-08-13 04:36:44 UTC  

not the same thing