stuka
stuka
113 / 7
10th Jun 2016
21st Jun 2016
Proof of the concept. Now, stable from the start.
electronics rbmk realistic chernobyl meltdown accurate reactor nuclear 2000001th destroyable

Comments

  • neved1
    neved1
    16th Jun 2016
    Funfact about the control box: I borrowed the circut from an old bunkerbuster bomb i made.
  • neved1
    neved1
    15th Jun 2016
    id:2002407 It has the little control box in the bottom left, and a sensor attached to the reactor
  • neved1
    neved1
    15th Jun 2016
    I gotta figure out where it went in the 60 pages of saved copies of things that i have. but when i do ill put the ID here
  • stuka
    stuka
    15th Jun 2016
    Sorry, it's not planned. Have you try TPT "large Screen" option? Anyway, when i finish control pannel it's to be more easy to make the buttons bigger.
  • NotNeverButNOW
    NotNeverButNOW
    15th Jun 2016
    On the new reactor, Make the control buttons bigger! Its nearly impossible to press one button without pressing 3 others at the same time
  • stuka
    stuka
    15th Jun 2016
    neved1: :D may you share it?
  • neved1
    neved1
    15th Jun 2016
    :D I modified it with a bit of my own automation systems to make it if it hits 299 C it shuts off the pressure, but keeping the coolant going in, until it reaches a nice cold 100 C, then it turns the pumps on again.
  • stuka
    stuka
    14th Jun 2016
    neved1: Yes, it's planned, but only works if saffety systems are On. New one have 24 individual pumps for fine reactor control, 6 temperature and 6 pressure sensonrs in the core AND pressurized Steam Separators Drums & Resservoir. Allowing higher operational temperature. I'll post it soon, only control pannel wifi-linking left :P sux
  • neved1
    neved1
    14th Jun 2016
    SUGGESTION: Make the new core have some kind of sensor that shuts off the pumps if it hits a certain temperature.
  • F03K
    F03K
    13th Jun 2016
    You can also read "The Day the Bomb Fell on America" by Clyde W. Burleson, it's one of my all-time favorites. Fun to read, and it tells of dozens of nuclear accidents. It's from 1967, so it predates Chernobyl.