Salton Sea Atomic Test Base Part 1

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  • Опубліковано 16 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 222

  • @stevesanders1905
    @stevesanders1905 Рік тому +6

    My grand parents had a trailer on the Salton sea. It was a really nice place. I was lucky enough to spend a week or two out of my summers from 1966 when I was 6 , until around 73 when they had both passed on. It was a hoppin place then and really cool. It was hard watching it die.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому +2

      I can only imagine. That place looks like it’s had a long hard fall.

  • @armchairtin-kicker503
    @armchairtin-kicker503 2 роки тому +17

    From the mid 60s to the mid 80s, my father and I did a considerable amount of fishing at Salton Sea. Looking at the specific location on the map, the Naval base was an area I never really notice, a spot we always drove around to get to the other side. In later years, I would drive pass Salton Sea on my way to San Felipa, Baja California. So many memories. Thanks.

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 2 роки тому +2

      Curious, what was he fishing for? Did your family eat the fish caught? I am sure the fish is fine to eat, just curious. Thanks for sharing, it is always good to remember those good memories.

    • @armchairtin-kicker503
      @armchairtin-kicker503 2 роки тому +4

      ​@@superchuck3259 Orangemouth corvina, tilapia, gulf croaker, and sargo. Corvinas were the illusive prize fish, the one for which there was a limit of seven. Once my dad and I limited-out offshore near Red Hill, an event a female game warden took particular note of with her binoculars. Yeah, she was there to greet us at the docks.

  • @Gregory47342
    @Gregory47342 2 роки тому +29

    Those power lines are actually Carrier Telephone Circuits and the glass insulators probably are Pyrex insulators. Open wire lines like that are now obsolete and the insulators are collectable.

    • @papawsbackyard8774
      @papawsbackyard8774 2 роки тому +1

      There is an abandoned rail line close to were i live with an old overhead line running nearly mostly of its length. The entire line could easily be 100 miles or more. There are thousands of those glass insulators sitting on those poles.

    • @marzsit9833
      @marzsit9833 2 роки тому

      these types of insulators were not made of pyrex aka borosilicate glass, that would have been an unnecessary expense.. these were made of ordinary bottle glass, the clear ones aren't worth much but the colored ones can be worth some money. the valuable ones were made before the 1940's.

    • @joseph-mariopelerin7028
      @joseph-mariopelerin7028 2 роки тому +1

      oh yeah? i have a crate full of those... it's yours for $50

    • @carlinshowalter1806
      @carlinshowalter1806 Рік тому

      Surprised the morons haven't shot those insulators,they seem to shoot everything else out in the desert!

  • @brentboswell1294
    @brentboswell1294 2 роки тому +43

    Those glass insulators were used for telephone and telegraph lines...those wires are spaced way too close to carry electrical power (the wires would be arcing!). Looks like telephone lines to me...railroad tracks had lots of wiring like that, too, along the tracks. It was used for internal telephones, telegraphs, and railroad signaling systems. It's been replaced by fiber optic cables since the mid 1980's.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +9

      Thanks for the clarification.

    • @RealRocdad
      @RealRocdad 2 роки тому +2

      Telephone lines and telegraph lines are not high voltage and did not require large glass insulators you're exactly opposite from correct.

    • @halfcircleworkshop
      @halfcircleworkshop 2 роки тому +16

      @@RealRocdad he is correct, those are telegraph lines. Yes typical modern phone systems are run in very thin wire, but in that era they used self support copper. The insulators are not that size for the voltage but to be robust enough to hold the wire without breaking. Also old telephone systems did amplify to a couple hundred volts on transmission lines to compensate for line loss.

    • @wyliesdiesels4169
      @wyliesdiesels4169 Рік тому +5

      @@RealRocdad youre incorrect. even the railroads used glass insulators for their telegraph lines. we have some abandoned lines out here in the central valley next to the railroad tracks. the glass insulators were indeed used for telephone lines. i am a communications contractor so this is my wheel house

    • @mahbriggs
      @mahbriggs Рік тому

      ​@@RealRocdad
      They may not have required them for the voltage, but they were used. The railroad by my place used them on the telegraph lines along the track. Our telephone also used those styles of insulators when it was above ground on telephone poles!😄

  • @rtqii
    @rtqii 2 роки тому +16

    Even before the Fat Man bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, the military had decided on the final configuration for the bomb case, and a special line of B-29 Superfortress bombers, the Silverplate series, were being manufactured to deliver bombs. An assembly line was set up to manufacture dummy bombs, and these were produced in large numbers. The dummy bombs included a wide variety with instrumentation inside, in addition to just cement filled cases that were the same size and weight, with the same mounting point system and balance as a live weapon. New types of barometric triggers, safety system interlocks, parachute deployment systems, etc.. would have been tested at this location.

  • @cinkidaz
    @cinkidaz Рік тому +1

    A friend of mine rode his dirt bike there and got it buried pretty deep in the mud. When I visited him, he had two nice KTM dirt bikes and I asked him why he had two? He told me about his getting the original one all gunked up at SS. I then said, "So, you got this one dirty and so you bought another one?". He thought for a minute and then said, "Yeah, I guess I did!". Gotta love having a really good income while you are single...... 🙂
    Love your videos. Keep up the good work!

  • @Madvizion
    @Madvizion 2 роки тому +5

    The drone following your truck was pretty epic. Wish more vloggers used this. Great job.

  • @jeremycook8783
    @jeremycook8783 2 роки тому +5

    Another great video! Keep 'em coming, Drew!

  • @farklek
    @farklek Рік тому +1

    You got some REALLY good cinematic shots on this one, beautiful work! I bet you have an excellent stash of desktop backgrounds.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      Thanks...its a great location to get cool shots at.

  • @derekdyer5682
    @derekdyer5682 Рік тому +1

    That was very cool, cant wait for part two. subscribed . thanks for the vid...

  • @Colt1775
    @Colt1775 2 роки тому +2

    I've noticed your videos are extremely high quality, you've got 33,400 views and only 899 likes on this video alone. Something doesn't add up. So here's a like and a new subscriber to spite the algorithm.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for both.

    • @Colt1775
      @Colt1775 2 роки тому

      @@RadioactiveDrew It's no problem. It's good content and deserves to be recognized as such.

  • @kurtbilinski1723
    @kurtbilinski1723 2 роки тому +11

    Regarding the Salton Sea itself, you haven't really experienced it until you're downwind in summer when it smells very much like an outhouse.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Oh I've been there in the summer at Bombay Beach and Red Hill. Wow, that smell was something else.

    • @maxortega4690
      @maxortega4690 2 роки тому +6

      The salton sea is a very shallow body of water averaging 6 to 12 ft with some deep holes about 40 to 60 ft in the south east area around bombay beach. As a result of this shallowness whenever the wind blows the salton sea ends up with anywhere from 3 to 5 ft waves. They stir up the sediment causing an algae bloom which will either be a red tide or a green tide and these will use up all the oxygen in the water. As a result fish and many other life forms dependent on oxygen will die. This is what causes the smell not the Salton Sea itself, not the water itself, but the algae bloom and the resulting fish die off due to lack of oxygen. I'm just a retired janitor but having grown up in the area i can tell you a lot about the history here. One thing i don't like to hear or read is words used to describe our communities as deplorable, pitiful, and toxic. Yes since the 1940s when they needed to increase food production for world war II they started using pesticides herbicides and fertilizers which were made chemically. All these have since settled into the bottom of the sea and of course that's where your toxic dust blowing around when the water dries that's where it comes from. The salton sea itself isn't deplorable isn't pitiful, isn't toxic, and doesn't stink. For those of you who believe otherwise, perhaps i should make the broad generalization that Los Angeles is nothing but homeless people, drug addicts, and people living in tents. Or wait a minute is that portland oregon i'm talking about????

    • @allen480
      @allen480 2 роки тому +1

      @@maxortega4690 Los Angeles and the area surrounding it is also full of smug, elitist, leftist America hating rodents.
      Your comment is spot on..respects!

    • @lestergillis8171
      @lestergillis8171 2 роки тому

      @@RadioactiveDrew Does it smell like... "a bag full of assholes"?

    • @carlinshowalter1806
      @carlinshowalter1806 Рік тому

      @@maxortega4690 Well,LA does have more than its share of deplorables,some of which dress nicely and live in fine homes.....

  • @dezertjeeper
    @dezertjeeper 2 роки тому +2

    makes me want to go out and explore the salton sea again. excellent video.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Thanks. The Salton Sea is a pretty amazing place.

  • @roentgen226
    @roentgen226 2 роки тому +5

    This content is more worth than 618 subs! Great video!

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks. Glad you liked it. Part 2 will come out next week. In that one I winch my friend out of some sand he got stuck in and check out some explosive bunkers.

    • @roentgen226
      @roentgen226 2 роки тому +3

      @@RadioactiveDrew looking forward to see it!

  • @Kalianyia
    @Kalianyia 2 роки тому +2

    Great video, love it. I've been out to the Salton Sea before. Looking forward to video #2!

  • @remolaan3741
    @remolaan3741 2 роки тому +4

    your channel is underratred ! ....great video

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it. Part 2 should be out this weekend.

  • @BeigeAlert
    @BeigeAlert 2 роки тому +6

    Another lovely video! I'm not a real expert on it but as I understand it when you see the dozens of little glass insulators and dozens of lines that's telegraph/early telephone lines, lots of separate lines in the days before the more modern methods of bundling up many circuits. Power you only have the three phases (or maybe two sets of three). And of course people do collect glass insulators (I've only got like a half-dozen common ones, I'm not a *real* collector!)

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for that. Helps me understand what I was seeing out there a little more.

    • @AtomicElectronCo
      @AtomicElectronCo 2 роки тому +1

      Yup, I think they are old style POTS lines....each pair....one phone line! Crazy! Pretty cool too.

    • @marzsit9833
      @marzsit9833 2 роки тому

      @@AtomicElectronCo actually each single wire was one line and all of the lines on a run shared a common signal return wire. so if you had 50 wires on a run you actually had 49 lines.

  • @BarryWilliams0
    @BarryWilliams0 2 роки тому +1

    Fantastic videography, Drew 👍👍👍😊

  • @keithroyster8373
    @keithroyster8373 Рік тому +1

    LOVE YOUR VIDEOS,VERY INTRIGUING.

  • @MontanaGrizzly73
    @MontanaGrizzly73 2 роки тому +3

    Those wires are open wire communication circuits. 4 ten pin arms, equal 20 circuits

  • @robx6098
    @robx6098 Рік тому

    Beautiful images. Beautiful topic. Beautiful music. Beautiful you. ❤

  • @davekonrad4712
    @davekonrad4712 2 роки тому +3

    I worked at Sandia lab in the nineties. They make the trigger that explodes at the precise second. Lawrence Livermore lab over hwy 580, they are the ppl's that build the Fat Boy. Sandia also have facilities in North New Mexico.

    • @allen480
      @allen480 2 роки тому

      Sandia also has a large R&D complex next to (or just inside) Kirtland AFB - Albuquerque, New Mexico. KAFB has also a major nuclear weapons storage area within the Manzano (spelling?) mountains at the base”s east perimeter.

  • @jamesmoody5961
    @jamesmoody5961 2 роки тому +2

    If i remember its either 8 inch or 9 inch tiles that were asbestos. We had to go through basic asbestos training when i was helping clean up after hurricane katrina. Only a few folks went and got certified in the actual hands on cleanup of the stuff.

  • @MarkRose1337
    @MarkRose1337 2 роки тому +4

    You'll get 10k subs before you know it. People just need to discover your channel

  • @bltc11
    @bltc11 2 роки тому +3

    Very interesting place. Looking forward to part 2.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      If you ever get a chance to check it out you should. Its a very interesting spot.

  • @paveltrips
    @paveltrips 2 роки тому +2

    Nice video! Thinking of going to Salton Sea next month

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Its a very cool place to explore. But watch out for sand and mud...have a plan to get out if you get stuck.

  • @jam9297
    @jam9297 Рік тому +1

    I loved dirt biking out to the bunkers out there. Or finding spent smoke grenades and m60 shells/links from that navy seal camp across the sea. The pink house is cool too although the last time I was there it was kinda falling apart. You should go back and look for the bunkers though, they're there.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      The Part 2 of this video I went out to the bunkers with a buddy of mine.

  • @cheetoburrito8104
    @cheetoburrito8104 2 роки тому +13

    I am confused on how you only have 600 subscribers!

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +3

      I guess YT doesn't like me that much. I keep getting comments like this, which is kind of funny.

    • @robertdeptula2003
      @robertdeptula2003 2 роки тому +2

      @@RadioactiveDrew"Sex, danger and food" sells. Do a video: "Danger! Avoid This Radioactive Food", and you will get views:).

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +5

      Thanks for the suggestion. But none of that would be true. I may hype up a title a bit to get people interested but my main goal is to let people know radiation is all around us and isn’t as dangerous as most people make it seem. I try and present it in a way that is nice to watch.

    • @robertdeptula2003
      @robertdeptula2003 2 роки тому +1

      @@RadioactiveDrew So, radiation is like KOWIT-XIX, " is all around us and isn’t as dangerous as most people make it seem"

    • @lciummo1
      @lciummo1 2 роки тому +1

      @@robertdeptula2003 Why not "Avoid this radioactive food during sex" then?

  • @lolajo2850
    @lolajo2850 2 роки тому +2

    The New River (sewage canal from Mexico, for those not familiar with the area) still drains into the Salton Sea. Definitely not safe to swim! 😝
    Thanks for sharing the video. It brought back a lot of childhood memories.

    • @carlinshowalter1806
      @carlinshowalter1806 Рік тому

      Border Patrol will not go in the water near there if that tells you anything!

  • @leonardmichaelwrinch446
    @leonardmichaelwrinch446 2 роки тому +2

    👍Good watch ‼️thanks 🙏✌🏽

  • @johnbarrett6842
    @johnbarrett6842 2 роки тому +1

    The pedestal that you said turns looks like the mounting base for a J arm davit, basically a small crane hoist for getting heavy equipment up onto the roof. In your shot of walking up the stairs I thought I saw a winch spool just below it

  • @katiedid1851
    @katiedid1851 2 роки тому +1

    Atomic Legacy sites are everywhere in this country. These sites include areas where atomic exploration in WWll and after. Thank you for your videos.

  • @Neptunium
    @Neptunium 2 роки тому +1

    always a very good prod and stunning images ! I wish I had that artistic gen! .. well done sir.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Thanks. I'm always trying to make them better.

  • @JohnLobbanCreative
    @JohnLobbanCreative Рік тому +1

    Those are telephone or control lines mostly. Cool place!

  • @weirdmeisterinc
    @weirdmeisterinc 2 роки тому +3

    great video editing!

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks.

    • @grantrennie
      @grantrennie 2 роки тому

      @@RadioactiveDrew would you be interested in coming to a youtuber meetup in Boston in a few months?

  • @randyhavener1851
    @randyhavener1851 2 роки тому +3

    You do the Coolest Stuff!!

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks...the Salton Sea is a place I've been going out to for the past 10 years. Mainly for the purpose of shooting photos and timelapse clips. About 4 years ago I started going out to the Navy/Test Base. Its a very unique place to visit.

  • @TrystyKat
    @TrystyKat 2 роки тому +5

    I really enjoyed the videography in this video, especially the drone shot following your 4x4
    Given the cost of fissile material in the 1940s, it's pretty unlikely that any of the bombs tested at Salton Sea contained any fissile material. I'm not sure if they would have had any depleted uranium either, as a lot of that was needed for refining the manufacture of tamper/pusher assemblies in nuclear weapons. Even though it was "waste" from the enrichment process, it was still pretty valuable.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      I’ve seen reports that they used depleted uranium in the test bombs out there. That’s the only reason I bought it up.

    • @TrystyKat
      @TrystyKat 2 роки тому +2

      @@RadioactiveDrew Fair enough. I only know about the British bomb project in any great detail. Somewhere I used to work was engaged in development of manufacturing techniques for the pushers. It was not particularly easy because apparently DU is a very challenging material to machine. That was all back in the 40s/50s, long before I got there, but a curious by-product was the suspiciously dense door stops that some of the older engineers possessed.

    • @myfavoritemartian1
      @myfavoritemartian1 2 роки тому

      @@RadioactiveDrew DPU was used as ballast in some of the casings with concrete as filler. Early on they used lead, but war was on and they needed lead for other things.. My wife's uncle worked there for a while.

  • @TheRattlesnakeRanch
    @TheRattlesnakeRanch Рік тому +1

    Im less than 50 miles away from there! On a different note, the Radeye B-20 is a little out of my price range... Whats your thoughts on the RADIATION line of survey meters for doing some ore exploration/clicking around. I see the Alert Ranger EXP for under $1100 w/ a pancake head. Is there another you would suggest? I thought I saw where you tested several but I cant seem to find it now but I dont remember you including any Radiation units. Thanks

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      I don't have any experience with the Alert Ranger. Some people seem to really like them from what I've heard. You could always get a used Ludlum Model 3 or a Model 14C...both of those can use a 44-9 pancake probe. The Ludlums are solid detector...I own 2 of them. Here's that video you were talking about ua-cam.com/video/3ONbwFMBS4Q/v-deo.html

  • @mybackhurts7020
    @mybackhurts7020 2 роки тому

    The Hot Springs at North Glamis resort helped my back more than anything else

  • @randyk7699
    @randyk7699 Рік тому +1

    Great video! Great drone work. It is a contaminated cesspool. CA is getting ready to waste more money on "cleaning" it up.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      Thanks. The way to fix it would be to allow some water to flow in and out. I know they have talked about cutting a canal. Personally, and I know this is going to sound horrible, but I want the water to keep getting lower. There are so many aircraft at the bottom of the Salton Sea and who knows what else. The responsible thing would be to have an inflow / outflow. It’s also a tricky area because it’s below sea level.

  • @chrisbusenkell
    @chrisbusenkell 11 місяців тому +1

    You might encounter residents out there, and you might get the chance to find out a lot of things about that town you never wanted to know...

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  11 місяців тому

      I've talked to people out at Bombay Beach over the years. Interesting characters out that way.

  • @kurtbilinski1723
    @kurtbilinski1723 2 роки тому +1

    That "little piece of junk" at 6:07 looks very much like a Facet electric fuel pump.

  • @HappyQuailsLC
    @HappyQuailsLC 2 роки тому +2

    Notice "legacy Site" not "disaster area".... and I think the reason for nothing being left has more to do with it being less accessible by drifting sand. Remember all the fishing that used to take place in that lake?

  • @williamlabarre4755
    @williamlabarre4755 2 роки тому +1

    @19:07 - and 21:00 - those are phone/telemetry lines, not power.

  • @holdenmatthews-cochran2400
    @holdenmatthews-cochran2400 2 роки тому +1

    Awesome!!!!!

  • @peckservers
    @peckservers 2 роки тому +1

    oh hey! you have the same tires that I got for my truck!

  • @peterwexler5737
    @peterwexler5737 2 роки тому +1

    Great music choices.

  • @elubaofficialvevo2787
    @elubaofficialvevo2787 Місяць тому +1

    I like your video✅

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Місяць тому

      Thanks for the like and comment. Really helps the videos reach.

  • @johnnycook6348
    @johnnycook6348 2 роки тому +1

    If you passed by any steel jacketed concrete chunks, those were the dummy bombs.
    And there's "target" towers on the East side. A few small ones on land and one BIG one in the water.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      I’ve seen the one out on the water. Some guy took a boat out to it.

  • @larrygoerke9081
    @larrygoerke9081 2 роки тому

    There's a lot of radioactive minerals below the surface in that area. There are (were?) several Unocal & Chevron Geothermal Power Plants operating there, using the seawater for circ water for their condensers. Ex-Navy Nuclear Operator who did some regular electrical test work at them in the 1980-90s. Met some other Ex-Navy Nukes working as Operators there. They wore TLDs & other Dosimetry. They told me, when I asked why, that the hot ground water they extract & circulate to boil their feedwater is loaded with radium and its decay products, and they get higher doses working there with its higher dose rates than we got in our respective Navy Plants (and the three civilian Nuke Plants I also worked at).

  • @thedale2112
    @thedale2112 2 роки тому +1

    You make me want to go there!

  • @tedsmith6137
    @tedsmith6137 2 роки тому +1

    Boeing used depleted uranium as balance weights on the control surfaces of their 747's. Quite safe as long as they were painted and had no corrosion. Corrosion powder of Depleted uranium is a very high risk Alpha Radiation source.

  • @carlinshowalter1806
    @carlinshowalter1806 Рік тому +1

    Wished I had known that area was there when I visited SS area back in 2009. I would like to camp out on that camera stand on a full moon night,think it would be cool.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      That would be cool. I would be very careful being on that now. Too many people have been destroying the walls.

  • @marktadlock5428
    @marktadlock5428 Рік тому +1

    I wonder if some of the bombs they dropped as dummies, would be cool to recover them for displaying

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      That would be cool…and a little dangerous.

    • @marktadlock5428
      @marktadlock5428 Рік тому +1

      @RadioactiveDrew it would safe if someone had a side sonar system to search the area, then working with the Navy for recovery.

  • @forwardomni1355
    @forwardomni1355 2 роки тому +1

    Good stuff!

  • @MichaelKGizzonimo
    @MichaelKGizzonimo 2 роки тому +3

    You flew your drone below Sea level! I’m proud of you.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Thanks.

    • @superchuck3259
      @superchuck3259 2 роки тому

      Denser the air, the easier it will fly.
      In mountains, some drones won't even fly.

  • @johnrossman6679
    @johnrossman6679 2 роки тому +1

    Looking on Google maps, I guess you are at the Naval Auxillary Air Station Salton Sea?

  • @NetworkXIII
    @NetworkXIII 2 роки тому

    what a bizarre place, thanks for the video

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson3948 2 роки тому

    This is great but is it “Depleted Uranium”? The early bombs did use fair amounts of U-238, which is basically the same thing, but was made the regular way and was not a reactor by-product like Depleted Uranium. The early bombs used U-238 for the shells surrounding the bomb core - not large but still hundreds of pounds. Both Depleted Uranium and U-238 have little radioactivity and are mainly a chemical hazard similar to lead.

  • @rabignall
    @rabignall 2 роки тому

    like your t-shirt. talking bout nukes, how can i get one for myself? love what you do!

  • @maxortega4690
    @maxortega4690 2 роки тому +1

    I live in Salton City, which is a few miles down the road and know exactlyvwhat you mean by swallowed by the sand.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      I bet. That's a very interesting place out there.

    • @maxortega4690
      @maxortega4690 2 роки тому +2

      @@RadioactiveDrew Most definitely, the reddish pinkish scars on the mountains behind the local Casino is actually a gold mine. The chocolate colored rock you can see on the local mts, and halfway between Indio and Blythe has a high Iron content. They also have Gold which has a high copper content and tarnishes black. I use Google Earth to find old Gold mines, plot a course to them, then use my 2021 TRD 4X4 OFF ROAD to get there. Look up Tumco, a former Gold mining town located south of Glamis above the I-8. I've explored the whole area now for 50+ years. The Santa Rosa mts. had the only Beryl mine and Emeralds have been found all over the area. The natives from Sonora Mexico would bring Mushrooms and Peyote for religious ceremonies, and receive Emeralds in exchange. I found a good sized Emerald in the early ,70's buried under an outside cooking grate next to a stone cabin in Martinez canyon. Not knowing what it was, and believing it to be glass we used ut for target practice. 8 years later when I discharged from the Army, I learned about the local history of Emeralds. It measuted about 3/4" thick, two inches high at one end tapering to 1" at the other end, and three inches long. MY LOSS!!

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      That whole area has some really cool geology.

  • @grantrennie
    @grantrennie 2 роки тому +1

    The Salton sea may have been additionally poisoned by radioactive metallic salts and mine dust from nearby (now long closed) mines on top of farming pesticides and crop spray chemicals over the years, so that's why your Geiger counter pancake probe may be chirping now and then?

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      More than likely its just naturally occurring radioactive elements. I'm sure some of it could be from contamination.

  • @wyliesdiesels4169
    @wyliesdiesels4169 Рік тому +1

    those look like telegraph and phone lines as they are far too close together to be power lines

  • @Page5framing
    @Page5framing Рік тому

    Hey drew. Next time you are utah I want to go with. I’ll be your safety vehicle to pull you out if and when you are stuck.

  • @DirtyPlumbus
    @DirtyPlumbus 10 місяців тому +1

    It could be interesting to see what a metal detector finds out there.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  10 місяців тому +1

      I totally agree. I want to go back out there before it gets insanely hot and windy.

  • @Mike-01234
    @Mike-01234 2 роки тому

    Actually Sandia Labs was the organization who built the test facility they stopped using it in 1961.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      They took over the base that was built by the Navy. It seems like the Navy base was smaller and Sandia expanded it

    • @chadx8269
      @chadx8269 Рік тому

      Now the range its at Tonopha AFB.

  • @tomkitchen9457
    @tomkitchen9457 2 роки тому

    Rocky Flatts?

  • @AmboyChamblis
    @AmboyChamblis Рік тому +1

    Little known secret. There were tunnels from the base to Thermal High School & out to The elementary school in thermal. In fact both schools still have their big valt doors were the tunnels connected!

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому +1

      Wow, I’m going to have to look into that.

    • @AmboyChamblis
      @AmboyChamblis Рік тому

      @@RadioactiveDrew I've tried to find more details with no luck. Hope you can find deeper info..

  • @nickpurdy
    @nickpurdy 2 роки тому

    Where did you get that shirt from?

  • @adam_beach_bum
    @adam_beach_bum 2 роки тому +2

    Great work! I’ve always been fascinated by nuclear fusion fission. In school during science we learned about the periodic table of elements, I didn’t view things then the way I do now. Thanks for bringing the content you have to your channel! I appreciate it.
    On a side note, I’m surprised those power lines haven’t been clipped and taken to be sold for their copper value.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      Glad you are enjoying the videos…and yeah I’m surprised as well those power lines are still there.

    • @jk-76
      @jk-76 2 роки тому +1

      Not sure if those lines are made of copper. High tension cables are usually steel.

    • @allen480
      @allen480 2 роки тому

      @@jk-76 … or aluminum?

  • @alans5799
    @alans5799 2 роки тому

    EPA page for DU:
    "DU is still used to make bullets and mortar shells. DU contamination of spent shells and shell fragments is a hazard at some military firing ranges.
    What you can do:
    Minimize your risk of internal exposure by limiting your proximity to uranium manufacturing plants and firing ranges that continue to use DU in ammunition."
    Not sure if you can go to a test range for DU but avoiding that warning sounds like something worth while.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      If there were particles or big pieces where I went it would have come up on the detector.

  • @Soundbrigade
    @Soundbrigade 2 роки тому

    "Oh here's an unexploded 50 Megaton hydrogen bomb, better not touch it ...!!"

  • @paahl1572
    @paahl1572 2 роки тому

    As soon as the music started I noped out.

  • @terrydavis8451
    @terrydavis8451 2 роки тому

    Where can I get one of those shirts?

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +1

      The t-shirts are available at uraniumstore.com

  • @dustbowlhammer7119
    @dustbowlhammer7119 2 роки тому +1

    Wow, so basically this place was a prequel to Area 51. Profound.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      More like a prequel to the Nevada Test site. But I guess Area 51 is there.

  • @EmmettConrecode
    @EmmettConrecode Рік тому +1

    I was told that Based was used to train for the failed Iranian hostage rescue.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      It was used for a couple of different things. I think troops when out there before they went to Operation Desert Storm. There are a lot of older shell casing out there.

  • @brianhilligoss
    @brianhilligoss 2 роки тому +2

    Careful with touching old power lines. Power lines can still build up very high voltages of static and capacitive voltage.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Thanks for the warning. I don’t think these lines would do this because none of them are isolated from the ground for that long.

  • @kursk_kuku141
    @kursk_kuku141 2 роки тому +5

    I just went last year! The road was unbearable, but just looking at this secret historical site was… BREATHTAKING.
    Also, someone from Palm Springs Air Museum mentioned a nuclear training sight there prior to atom bomb of Hiroshima and post WWII.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +2

      The Navy controlled the base before Sandia took it over for the whole atomic testing.

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar 2 роки тому +2

      "site".

    • @kursk_kuku141
      @kursk_kuku141 2 роки тому

      @@MrShobar Thanks, for spell check.

  • @claramullen
    @claramullen Рік тому

    I don't understand why you have a geiger counter when they never had anything out there just dimmy bombs.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      Some of the dummy atomic bombs still used uranium metal in them to simulate the correct weight and other aspects.

  • @chadwahl9085
    @chadwahl9085 2 роки тому

    Not even a glimpse of Trevor Phillips

  • @jameshanson1842
    @jameshanson1842 2 роки тому

    Check out the film “The Monster That Challenged the World” (1957)

  • @englishguy1985
    @englishguy1985 2 роки тому +1

    Are they KO2’s on the Tacoma? Just bought a set for my Tacoma.
    Cheers for the great video.

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому

      Yeah...I really like the KO2's. They work really well in the dirt, sand and snow. I would say mud as well but not much is great in the mud. The desert mud is some of the worst mud because of the clay mixed in. Good luck with the KO2's on your Tacoma...I think I'm on my 4th set. I have around 320K miles on my Taco.

  • @LarsLarsen77
    @LarsLarsen77 2 роки тому

    The bombs wouldn't explode or anything cool like that, they would just bury themselves in the sand very very quickly.

  • @lestergillis8171
    @lestergillis8171 2 роки тому

    I don't see why visitors can't just leave the old structures alone so future generations can see them...🤔

  • @MrErichonda30
    @MrErichonda30 Рік тому

    Buy yourself some Staun tire deflators.

  • @kevinbroadway5398
    @kevinbroadway5398 Рік тому +1

    you know that sand will eat your frame and undercarriage

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      I pressure wash my truck pretty regularly.

    • @kevinbroadway5398
      @kevinbroadway5398 Рік тому

      you would have to pressure wash it w WD40
      @@RadioactiveDrew

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      @kevinbroadway5398 I’ve been out there about a dozen times with my truck since getting it back in 2011. There hasn’t been any excessive rust. I get my truck up on a lift at least once a year or more. So I get to walk under it and see everything in great detail.

    • @kevinbroadway5398
      @kevinbroadway5398 Рік тому +1

      ok well i went once on my dirtbike right up to the water where the dead fish were and got stuck in the mud almost and by the time i got home the chain was rusted and the next day the whole bike was rusted i had to use soap and scrub every nook and cranny them spray WD40 all over the bike and then ride it a few times in just reg dirt and rinse soap wd repeat i ended up tearing it down to the frame and greasing all the bearings and some were just shot and needed to be replaced@@RadioactiveDrew

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому +1

      @@kevinbroadway5398 oh yeah, the mud and water at the Salton Sea can be extremely damaging to metal. I've never taken my truck in the water...almost got stuck in some mud by Red Hill Marina. But I've found that if you stick to the dry sand and stay away from the water in the lake you should be good.

  • @erich84502a
    @erich84502a 2 роки тому

    But that zipcode has that look

  • @dougnemeth5249
    @dougnemeth5249 3 місяці тому +1

    They’re phone lines….

  • @sternwardboss
    @sternwardboss Рік тому +1

    When are you going to see the Elephants foot ? Lol
    You need to go to Chernobyl.
    Can you even go right now ?

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  Рік тому

      I would like to go. But I don’t think that’s going to happen for a while.

  • @davidwatson7919
    @davidwatson7919 2 роки тому

    the smell... crazy weird place

  • @dandavis4469
    @dandavis4469 2 роки тому

    nukular is not a word and nuclear (nuk lee urr) is

    • @RadioactiveDrew
      @RadioactiveDrew  2 роки тому +3

      I’ll keep saying it my way.

    • @scruffguitar2
      @scruffguitar2 2 роки тому +1

      Nuke-lay-her? Nuke-lee-hear? Nuka-cola? Nuka-nuka-motha-trucka? Why tf does it matter how he pronounces it? 🤣 Did ya know what he was referring to? Then yep, his way was working just fine 💁‍♂️

    • @noodlelynoodle.
      @noodlelynoodle. 2 роки тому +1

      The gunny partbof you being a pendantic ass is you're simply wrong it is a word and means nut shapped. It's also a pronunciation for nuclear that's been around since the 40's so you're not going to get rid of it it's just like calling an opossum a possum, language evolves like shit yeet is an actual word in dictionaries now because of it and nuculur has been around a hell of a lot longer

  • @hmbpnz
    @hmbpnz Місяць тому

    Love this channel but I twitch every time he says "NUC-U-LAR"....it's gotta be trolling at this point.

  • @Robin-Smith
    @Robin-Smith 2 роки тому +1

    I'd love to be you. Pickup. Geiger counter. Imagination.

  • @35ABSTRACT
    @35ABSTRACT 2 роки тому

    Nu-clear

  • @michaelmckay
    @michaelmckay 2 роки тому

    You cant swim in the salton sea

  • @Phil-eu4dr
    @Phil-eu4dr 6 місяців тому +1

    What an ecological disaster it has become.

  • @justimagine2403
    @justimagine2403 2 роки тому

    pass

  • @rickhobson3211
    @rickhobson3211 2 роки тому

    Watch out for giant snails! ua-cam.com/video/50NZq9DNVa0/v-deo.html

  • @rhondawithington3682
    @rhondawithington3682 2 роки тому

    And stinky

  • @uprrslo
    @uprrslo 2 роки тому +1

    Who owns the land now BLM?