How Chernobyl Exploded - PART THREE: The Final Minutes

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  • Опубліковано 24 кві 2024
  • It is now 1AM, April 26th, 1986. Unbeknownst to the operators, they are now rocketing down the path to destruction. These next few minutes are critical for the survival or demise of the reactor, and they are equally misunderstood by the general public. So, let’s explore them.
    With thanks to the following for creating the locations seen in this video:
    Control Room 4 - Hydroproject.
    / discord
    Control Room 3 - Unit Three
    / discord
    Exterior - Gherkinbeans
    / discord
    With thanks to Bobby and Sredmash for reviewing the scripts.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 175

  • @WhereIsTheCheese
    @WhereIsTheCheese Місяць тому +131

    Akhimov deserves a CGI mustache. That thing was glorious.

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +25

      True.

    • @swokatsamsiyu3590
      @swokatsamsiyu3590 Місяць тому +11

      Please do not rule out Toptunov's mustache as well. It sure had the possibility of becoming equally epic.

    • @chieftainmk_11
      @chieftainmk_11 Місяць тому +8

      @@swokatsamsiyu3590Akimov Too! And Stolyarchuk!

    • @Soldier600
      @Soldier600 Місяць тому +6

      They all need cgi mustaches

    • @aluminium5738
      @aluminium5738 Місяць тому +3

      metlenkos beard :)

  • @yarost12
    @yarost12 Місяць тому +103

    "The pressure inside the core has been released" yeah that's one way to put it

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Місяць тому +14

      "A rapid unintentional disassembly"

  • @karachaffee3343
    @karachaffee3343 Місяць тому +55

    Imagine flying an airliner where the feedback from changes in the flight controls took two minutes to reach the pilots...

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 Місяць тому +71

    The best series about the event. No artificial drama, no BS. Top tier quality content on UA-cam.

    • @Just.A.T-Rex
      @Just.A.T-Rex Місяць тому +4

      Only second to stanfords nuclear physics course here on UA-cam:)

    • @nathandevine552
      @nathandevine552 Місяць тому +4

      I think this is one story that requires no additional drama

    • @NionXenion-gh7rf
      @NionXenion-gh7rf Місяць тому

      laughable​@@Just.A.T-Rex

    • @--SPQR--
      @--SPQR-- 20 днів тому

      ​@@nathandevine552exactly. So incredibly overblown it's embarrassing.

  • @williebruciestewie
    @williebruciestewie Місяць тому +72

    I did not expect a part three this soon, a pleasant surprise.

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +28

      It's Chernobyl Week, 7 videos over 7 days :)

    • @Ivan_1255
      @Ivan_1255 Місяць тому

      Same

    • @OilerMusic
      @OilerMusic Місяць тому +2

      Well also it is the 26th of April currently in Ukraine. 12:30 AM at the time of writing this so the 38th anniversary of the explosion is very soon.

  • @richardgadberry8398
    @richardgadberry8398 Місяць тому +31

    "He's in shock. Get him out of here."

  • @longlakeshore
    @longlakeshore Місяць тому +21

    "Because it's cheaper" sums up the MO of the Soviet era.

    • @LividCreature
      @LividCreature 20 днів тому +1

      Yes, but you’d think the USSR would have enough mind to trust their nuclear physicists and allocate more resources to the safety of, oh I don’t know, A NUCLEAR REACTOR.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 19 днів тому +4

      @@LividCreature Are you implying that the State, and therefore the Party, made a mistake, comrade? [takes out little notebook]

  • @swokatsamsiyu3590
    @swokatsamsiyu3590 Місяць тому +31

    What a phenomenal conclusion of this 3 part series. Very, very well done. And you even included the exercise bike in the CGI representation of the control room, impressive attention to detail! The thing that still has my brains doing triple backflips is "had to wait 5 minutes before the system would spit out the results..." Good grief, when you're dealing with a reactor capable of doing a full about-face in literal nanoseconds, at least give it a computer system that isn't walking at a snail's pace.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +8

      The in-control-room display is a point of controversy among us. If you look at page 38 of INSAG-7 and in some other sources the suggestion is there was no such thing. The 01:22:30 printout is such a big deal presumably because of this. Yet I think in Shcherbak's book (possibly Karpan's) operators are being quoted as apparently referring to some display. Sredmash and That Chernobyl Guy are comfortable tying this display directly to the PRIZMA program that produced printout calculations whereas I'm not. So it's a surprisingly important detail that, as usual, is flying under the radar, and I find it particularly controversial.

    • @swokatsamsiyu3590
      @swokatsamsiyu3590 Місяць тому +3

      @@markusw7833
      I was more talking about the SKALA system in general, not necessarily a specific display. As ingenious as it was, it was also woefully underpowered for its intended task.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +4

      @@swokatsamsiyu3590 Right, there was a systemic limitation. Five minutes was actually the minimum time. Five to about fifteen minutes is the window. In general the ORM was simply treated as not that important.

    • @Melanie16040
      @Melanie16040 Місяць тому +1

      @@markusw7833 Had the employee that was not present due to being told the reactor was shut down been there. Do you know if the computer they had for guiding ORM more advanced/faster?

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +2

      @@Melanie16040 I don't know about this employee. Unless he factored the actual values of the coefficients of reactivity into his program or whatever rather than the misleading ones the operators had available I'm a little skeptical as to his value. This is another detail found I believe in Karpan's book that seems at odds with what I've been reading.

  • @mrkeogh
    @mrkeogh Місяць тому +8

    This is by far the most nuanced and comprehensive explanation of what was going on inside Unit 4. Bravo! 👏🏻

  • @user-vq6fd3bb6y
    @user-vq6fd3bb6y Місяць тому +19

    I love the music because it matches the mood with the video and I’m just imagining the chaos that’s going on in the control room.

    • @tomsear1
      @tomsear1 Місяць тому +1

      Agreed! The choreographic synchronicity of the opening with the cement mixer is perfect. It would be interesting to experience how Shostakovich would feel in this context, do you think?! The list of Ukrainian modern composers is vast, so can't single one out, but undoubtedly would resonate. Guonadottir's score for HBO is stunning and if U enjoy that check out Hildur's score for Sicario:Day of the Soldado. Anyway, cough better be quiet while we wait for live event. Though in Eastern Australia I see a pink Brown dawn appearing so may be snoring by then so give me a kick if disturbing the audience.....

  • @KuvDabGib
    @KuvDabGib Місяць тому +15

    I have seen dozens and dozens of doumentaries and books about this event, and people involved. This 3 episodes are absolutely best. IDK how did you manage that, but keep doing it!

  • @apollomoon1
    @apollomoon1 Місяць тому +4

    This guy is the most unbiased presenter of evidence about this event. Thanks for your research and clear understandable presentations.

  • @ianlynch4531
    @ianlynch4531 Місяць тому +7

    Quick Note, Beta effective is the effective delayed neutron fraction. Different reactors will have different Beff values, which you are correct in saying define the boundary between a normal operating state and prompt critical. However, an addition of reactivity equal to Beff when the reactor is critical (ie keff=1 or p=0) is what defines the prompt critical boundary, not just the value of Beff. For example, if a reactor's beff value is 0.005 delta k/k, a keff of 1.005 would be prompt critical (the reactor is sustaining criticality on prompt neutrons alone). The value of Beff changes over core life, but remains constant from day to day operations.

  • @davidbaca7853
    @davidbaca7853 Місяць тому +11

    What a really good 3 part series

  • @veteransniper6955
    @veteransniper6955 Місяць тому +13

    "positive SCRAM effect" is a term coined by reactor's designers in attempt to cover their backs and shift the blame to operators. It is like positive results for cancer or Alzheimer's test, you can have plus sign, but there is little positive about it. Purpose of SCRAM system according to USSR reactor designer's regulation is to "rapidly and sufficiently insert amount of negative reactivity needed to shut the reactor down and keep it in that state". It is used in cases of emergency, as a response to violation of safety critical parameters, and also to shut reactor down as last step of routine shutdown procedure. "Positive SCRAM effect" means SCRAM system doesn't meet basic requirement for that system. Moreover, "positive SCRAM effect" implies SCRAM system in some situations does exactly the opposite - it inserts positive reactivity, increasing reactor's power. This also makes various protections of the reactor to behave weird. E.g. during the event, reactor's protection detected abnormally high reactor's power level and abnormally high rate of power increase, and initiated SCRAM. Logically, it should lead to rapid insertion of amount of negative reactivity, enough to shut down the reactor and reliably keep it in shutdown state. With "positive SCRAM effect" the effect is opposite.
    In combination with slow rate of insertion of control rods that power peak may be rather long and devastating, it took 4 seconds for the reactor to explode with power rise from several percent to 100x of nominal, while insertion time of control rods was about 26 seconds, few time slower than on reactors of similar size, but without such large positive coefficient. That was determined be totally inadequate, while reactor designer's regulatory documents require speed of operation of control mechanisms must be enough to provide robust and efficient control of reaction and reliable shutdown, including cases of emergencies and accident.
    And of course positive reactivity coefficient not only opened and shortened path to unintended prompt criticality, but it also highlights control system's inadequacy. Positive reactivity coefficient not only makes the reactor unstable and hard to control, producing tendency to power swings, but also, with increase of positive reactivity coefficient, makes swings larger and faster, and this requires much faster control system to fight with than it would be needed without positive coefficient. While negative coefficient does the opposite, making the reactor more stable, self-regulating and able to counteract disturbances. That's why reactor designer's regulation state "the reactor should have negative power coefficient in general; in case the reactor would have positive power coefficient, special attention should be paid to investigate and ensure safety of the reactor in stationary, transient and accident scenarios"

    • @bsadewitz
      @bsadewitz 21 день тому

      I never took "positive" to mean anything else except a mathematical '+', and I'm unsure that the original Russian term even has such a dual meaning. It simply refers to the paradoxical, momentary increase in reactivity lower in the core following the insertion of the control rods (?)
      I strongly suspect you're reading into it a connotation that simply isn't there.

    • @bsadewitz
      @bsadewitz 21 день тому

      Incidentally, IIRC, the operators were not aware of this.

    • @bsadewitz
      @bsadewitz 21 день тому

      I mean, based on the rest of your post, you probably have more of a grasp on the actual relevant concepts than I do, so I'm puzzled by your initial statement. It's just like "positive void coefficient" versus "negative void coefficient", or "it is negative 31 degrees outside".

    • @reverbscherzo7850
      @reverbscherzo7850 День тому

      ⁠@@bsadewitzNegative 31 degrees?! That sounds bad!

    • @bsadewitz
      @bsadewitz 20 годин тому

      @@reverbscherzo7850 So does +130!

  • @mikeall7012
    @mikeall7012 Місяць тому +8

    I work in the nuke industry and have been to senior reactor operations class. It worries me that the ops folks had such a poor understanding of neutronics that they didn't recognize the impacts of the graphite tipped rods.
    I'm not blaming them since they weren't trained, but the concept about reactivity margin and the neutron life cycle is covered very thoroughly these days, and rightfully so. An operator should know every potential impact on reactivity that can occur, no matter how slight.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому

      It was nuclear experts who lacked an accurate understanding. That's how an RBMK reactor explodes. I don't know if that worries you or what.

    • @mikeall7012
      @mikeall7012 Місяць тому +2

      @@markusw7833 the experts knew. This channel does a great job of covering that kn earlier episodes. But the design bases were a closely guarded state secret.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +1

      @@mikeall7012 No, the experts did not know. I have written scripts for this channel about the experts not knowing, albeit there were some warnings. In two and a half weeks you will see a roughly one-hour video that will rehash the key factors the experts did not accurately understand. Stick around.

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 7 днів тому

      The graphite tipped rods are still there. Due to the positive void factor (that's a "negative water presence factor"), a RBMK reactor can't work without them displacing water. What changed is that now, when the rods are fully extracted, the base of the graphite tip is at the bottom of the core, instead than 1.2m above it.
      When they had been made like that, not even the designers understood the risk. Otherwise they would have made them like the actual "modified" ones from the start. After the first power surges, they understood the cause and started to search for a solution, but none had been implemented at Chernobyl before the incident.

  • @burkezillar
    @burkezillar Місяць тому +5

    It's incredible to me that they had to wait 5 minutes for readings to be returned to them, and that the read outs on the wall were limited to just one parameter at a time. Computing speed aside, it's insane that you couldn't just stick a few more panels there and display those things all the time.

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 7 днів тому +1

      RBMK was '70s technology. There was a single SKALA computer (a ferrite core computer with 12kb memory, that's less than 1/5 than a Commodore 64) to control every parameter of the reactor, and it couldn't perform more than one task at any time. BTW the last SKALA had been decommissioned on Smolensk NPP Unit 3 in 2016.
      As explained earlier, to perform any task that was not routine running (test, or shutdown of the reactor), it was available, 24/7 a representative of the Nuclear Physics Laboratory. An experienced operator with a computer and the program that allowed to have that reading almost in real time. Unfortunately, that night, Anatoly Chernishev, the specialist on shift, had been mistakenly told, at the entrance of the reactor, that it had already been shut down, so his presence was not necessary, and he went back home.

  • @Dream25_
    @Dream25_ Місяць тому +4

    Excellent as usual. There is nothing on this planet that ignites my hunger for knowledge like the bits and pieces of details we still don't know about what was taking place in the core and how the ingredients came together in such a near perfect way to achieve the result we're all aware of. Hopefully one day I'll have something to contribute to those mysteries. 😅

  • @kevinamundsen7646
    @kevinamundsen7646 Місяць тому +3

    Your finest masterpiece! So well done. Superb computer graphics in stunning detail, no other Chernobyl series comes close to this wealth of information. And yet, I feel a bit sad, what a terrible and needless tragedy it was. Sincere thank you for this great work and all you've done behind the scenes. These will be seen and enjoyed by many.

  • @protector1990
    @protector1990 22 дні тому +2

    I believe I also read somewhere that those bottom-inserted control rods were not attached to AZ-5 scram mechanism at the time. They already started changing this in RBMKs in 1986, but unfortunately it still hadn't been done in Chernobyl unit 4 by then. If it had been, then that alone might have been enough to prevent the explosion.

  • @tylerbrass4002
    @tylerbrass4002 Місяць тому +3

    Hey, I was looking forward to this, the series has been spectacular.

  • @Hydrogenblonde
    @Hydrogenblonde Місяць тому +2

    A brilliant recreation of events. Just the thing I was seeking. I must now re-watch these videos.

  • @namelesske
    @namelesske Місяць тому +9

    38th year of the tragedy tonight

  • @mistypuffs
    @mistypuffs Місяць тому +2

    Really detailed and interesting. Thank you so much

  • @emmchen1101
    @emmchen1101 Місяць тому

    This is exactly what I needed. Thank you! Looking forward to the real time video. : )

  • @danielle3064
    @danielle3064 Місяць тому

    Fantastic video and you deserve way more views it is criminal

  • @YoungBuck4146
    @YoungBuck4146 Місяць тому +2

    i just finsihed Chernobyl series an hour ago and had to get the real story and glad i stumbled on this channel because it is explained so well.

  • @chrisperry7963
    @chrisperry7963 Місяць тому

    Excellent series, top notch, thank you!

  • @kary_eich3
    @kary_eich3 Місяць тому +2

    I am very excited because, this is my first year to celebrate the anniversary of the Chernobyl tragedy. It wasn't until a year ago that I researched everything about the tragedy (I had been putting it off for years) and it caught me, now I am interested in everything related to the subject. I am very happy to celebrate with you. Thank you for this video and all information 😃. From El Salvador 🇸🇻👋🏻

  • @user-hd8hp1fk6k
    @user-hd8hp1fk6k Місяць тому +2

    I watched all of your videos, and they are really great and extremely insightful. To the matter itself: I strongly believe that if one chose to become a reactor operator then you will to accept from day one that you will have zero room for creativity in this profession. Here, it’s all about following regulations to the word without any fail ever. If you can’t live with that then please go for literally anything else.

  • @andy99ish
    @andy99ish Місяць тому +6

    So they were running a test on a xenon-poisoned reactor they did not really understand and which was inherently unstable and whose emergency brake acted like an accelerator in the early stage of its employment . Does that sum it up ?

    • @chriz9959
      @chriz9959 Місяць тому +1

      i think you are delusional, i have to send you to the infirmary

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Місяць тому +4

      The reactor's designers also did not really understand its behavior at low power. The test wasn't really problematic, it just coincidentally put the reactor in its most unstable operating regime. But yes, pretty much sums it up.

  • @iancanuckistan2244
    @iancanuckistan2244 8 днів тому

    I remember it all too well. Watching the fallout cloud go over northeastern Europe was scary as hell.

  • @ChaplainDMK
    @ChaplainDMK Місяць тому +19

    It's odd how wrong and even misleading HBOs Chernobyl seems to be, especially tragic for a series whose entire leitmotif is "Lies incur a debt to the truth".

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +4

      There is much you haven't seen. The irony couldn't be greater.

    • @legogenius1667
      @legogenius1667 Місяць тому

      Just curious, what exactly did the series get wrong and right? I was under the impression it was fairly well-researched.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +1

      @@legogenius1667 What exactly the series gets wrong is way too long to comment on here. Most notably the series gets high-level things not only wrong but diametrically wrong. It's a staggering failure of research. The ironic failure of it will be used as a point of departure for a couple of videos in June that will look into the seminal Soviet expert lies shaping the narrative from early on.

    • @ChaplainDMK
      @ChaplainDMK Місяць тому +2

      @@legogenius1667 Apparently the staff did nothing outside regulation, all the steps they did were not prohibited. They did not follow research protocol, but there were no rules against having the reactor at very low power, or bringing the power back up from a very low power state. The situation up UNTIL the disaster was, in the eyes of the staff, completely normal. There was no power-surge that Akimov or Toptunov were trying to stop with the AZ-5, Toptunov just pressed the AZ-5 because the test was over and the reactor was to be shut down. Dyatlov was not screaming, yelling and threatning the plant crew, and Bryukhanov did not have to do the Turbine run-down as only 4 other tests of this kind were performed on 16 reactors, none of the successful - and on the other hand experience showing that the cooling was adequate in the 1 minute period between loss of power and the generators starting.

    • @OutbackCatgirl
      @OutbackCatgirl 19 днів тому

      the hbo series is basically full of overdramatization and oversimplification for the purpose of selling audiences on a narrative that is, to put it bluntly, being used to tell an incredibly misleading and biased version of events. Why? Bugger if i know, it could be anything from political fearmongering to producers and or writers wanting to tell the most dramatic story possible for maximum profit. In the end all that matters is that tv serials like it are to be taken with as much salt as possible and viewed not as documentaries but as a kind of historical entertainment based fiction.

  • @solomongainey838
    @solomongainey838 Місяць тому

    Excellent video!

  • @benny8694
    @benny8694 Місяць тому +7

    released on the 26th impressive

  • @reidwallace4258
    @reidwallace4258 Місяць тому +2

    Shit, fell asleep listening to one, woke up to the other. Love the upload schedule.

  • @silfvro1963
    @silfvro1963 Місяць тому +15

    Wow I'm actually first, "No views".

  • @olarubogdan46
    @olarubogdan46 Місяць тому +2

    Another year passed since it happened. It totally shaped the way we handle nuclear safety today.

  • @paulelephant9521
    @paulelephant9521 Місяць тому +1

    Great series, and explains very well how the operators ended up in the situation that they did and felt pretty confident they could just hit the SCRAM button and go home without blowing anything up. There was one detail I'm sure I remember hearing on some documentary about the incident years ago, but have never heard mentioned since. Apparently it was necessary to type the required generator output into the control system, i.e. 500MW and this was quite easy to forget/not register properly, and when the shift changed it's possible Toptunov forgot to do this and that's why there was a sudden power decrease which resulted in the mass control rod withdrawal to get back up to 200MW.
    For me this is the nub of the whole accident, without the sudden power decrease and subsequent actions to correct the low power level there would have been no accident (well at least not on this day, although the inherent problem of the graphite displacers was an accident waiting to happen)
    I do feel Dyatlov has been given a pretty rough deal from the new series, which more or less pins the blame on him to a large extent, which just seems unfair. Legasov gets a positive representation in the series , biut it could easily be argued he was much more culpable than Dyatlove, he knew about the problems with the graphite tips and was part of the establishment that approved and built RBMK reactors, knowing full well they didn't have the technology to really make them safe (5-15 mins for a computer to tell you if your reactor configuration is safe, lol! that's just bonkers)

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +2

      The "setting the output into the Control" thing is from Midnight in Chernobyl. I'm guessing this is Higginbotham misunderstanding it as that is actually more advanced than the real system LMAO.
      In real life, there were three wires corresponding to the three groups of automatic control rods, which you would manually adjust the current flowing through where the voltage corresponds to the percentage output.
      Given the behaviour of the system, with AR-1 withdrawing and AR-2 not moving, he just set it slightly too high, which is easy when you're dealing with a current on a wire.

  • @wolf3515
    @wolf3515 Місяць тому

    lets go part 3 keep up the good work

  • @Projectdarke
    @Projectdarke Місяць тому

    I had a REACTION (sry) to the background music, can you tell which pieces you used?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +1

      Music is listed at the end of the video in order :)

    • @Projectdarke
      @Projectdarke Місяць тому

      It is! I turned the vid off after the last narration, My bad. Anyway, great video!

  • @eradicatorbloxXIIX
    @eradicatorbloxXIIX 28 днів тому

    what chernobyl video game did you use for thumbnail?

  • @brucetucker4847
    @brucetucker4847 19 днів тому

    I saw your (excellent) video on when and how the accident might have been avoided, but another question I have is when was the _latest_ time AZ-5 could have been pressed and caused a safe shutdown? I would assume if they'd shut it down when the power reached its minimum everything would have been fine, aside from the tests not being run.

  • @punishedfoxo
    @punishedfoxo Місяць тому +6

    No joke, since you started posting videos, I've noticed a lot more people defend Dyatlov.
    Three years ago, I legit got banned from an engineering discord server for getting into an argument about his role in the disaster.

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +3

      I am really happy that my videos in some way have an impact.
      My thoughts have always first and foremost been about the legacies of all those involved, and how I can change it for the better.

    • @punishedfoxo
      @punishedfoxo Місяць тому +4

      @@thatchernobylguy2915 Trust me, whenever the topic comes up, I find it way easier to just share your videos than attempt to explain something that I don't actively keep sources for. The guys in that control room deserved so much better, the least we can do as people interested in the disaster is clear their names and highlight the discrepancies with the official story.

  • @isbestlizard
    @isbestlizard Місяць тому +3

    If you met any of these engineers in the pub the night before and told them 'Hey, don't run that test tomorrow, the reactor will explode' what could you tell them to convince them, rather than write you off a a drunk idiot?

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Місяць тому +8

      Tell them the power coefficient is positive, the void coefficient is plus five beta and the steam coefficient never stops rising for the whole x axis. Would scare the living shit out of them.

    • @OutbackCatgirl
      @OutbackCatgirl 19 днів тому +1

      i would probably get very weird looks because i do not speak russian.
      i think my best bet would be to say nothing, wear the most stunningly etherial dress (with LED lights in it for effect) and makeup i can find, and slip them a photo of the exploded reactor with the date and time of the disaster printed on it inside an envelope, and vanish. Spook the shit outta them. Make it so the photo is on that paper that degrades within half an hour of contact with air or maybe light, too. Full hammed up "apparition from heaven" kinda shit.

  • @girodavivere
    @girodavivere Місяць тому +1

    I'm sorry, is there an exercise bike in the background of the animation of Dyatlov?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +4

      The Chernobyl Unit Four Control Room had an exercise bike in real life. The operators needed the opportunity to stretch their legs without leaving the room, so they had installed exercise equipment. Ignalina, for example had a full weightlifting set with a bench.
      You can see the exercise bike in the background of a video in the Control Room before the explosion. Its current fate is unknown.

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Місяць тому +2

      And in the '90s the operators started playing Pong on one of the new control room computers. Until the deputy chief engineer caught them in the act and cut the power cable with an axe.

    • @OutbackCatgirl
      @OutbackCatgirl 19 днів тому

      ​@@thatchernobylguy2915i now feel vindicated in keeping an exercise bike in my room. if it's good enough for chernobyl it's good enough for me!

  • @SunBear69420
    @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +5

    Happy Chernobyl Eve Everyone!!!!!

  • @BerndUlmann
    @BerndUlmann Місяць тому

    Brilliant!

  • @EliteLucarioRS
    @EliteLucarioRS Місяць тому +2

    Its 38 years since the disaster tomorrow too

  • @dacian.dan.13
    @dacian.dan.13 Місяць тому +1

    The real reason for the Chernobyl incident? Reality could barely contain the power of Akimov's mustache, and Toptunov was also becoming a threat.
    A KX-class incident was inevitable, and so the SCP Foundation had to terminate both mustaches under the guise of a "catastrophic reactor failure."

  • @haddockdafish6572
    @haddockdafish6572 Місяць тому +2

    I don't get it... Why is was so hard for reactor designers to add a simple gauge (digital all analog) that will show (in real time mode) the exact number of control rods inserted? Why it needs to be calculated via SCALA with 5min lag every now and then? I get that neutron flow, or core temperature gradient in such enormous stucture like RBMK is rather comlicated and somewhat abstract matter that cannot be measured on the demand. But controls rods have very simple parameters: overall number of rods currently inserted in the core and depth (in meters) on witch those rods are actually inserted

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Місяць тому +1

      The designers wouldn't bother to do that because the number of inserted rods was not regarded as critical to safety by them either.

  • @kakwa
    @kakwa 18 днів тому

    What was the reason for the 5 minutes delayed display of reactivity by SKALA? Potato computer with too little power or the need to collect and aggregate data over 5 minutes?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  18 днів тому

      Both. The SKALA computer was a design from the 1960s, and had to process hundreds to thousands of data points in a single calculation. It was replaced in 1995.

  • @MrChainsawAardvark
    @MrChainsawAardvark Місяць тому +6

    It feels really counter-intuitive that too much coolant can be bad for a nuclear reactor. Yet we see a problem with flow rates here, and in Three Mile Island, where the operators became convinced that there was too much water in the system.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +2

      There was a rule against excessive flows for the main circulation pumps so they wouldn't cavitate or apparently destroy themselves, which was a consequence that did not occur at Chernobyl. However, there wasn't one for the reactor core. Soviet experts got quite clever in how they presented this. The consequence tied to Chernobyl is about the temperature of the coolant rising close to the boiling point, which INSAG-7 seems to attribute to lack of condensate feedwater flow as the reactor wouldn't be producing much steam which was supposed to subcool the coolant yet you see the operators being able to call extra feedwater flow from somewhere. Furthermore, apparently there was neither a prohibition on connecting all main circulation pumps or on operating with lack of subcooling, and a high coolant temperature occurred naturally in RBMK reactors. This will be discussed in a later video.

  • @KarinaMilne
    @KarinaMilne Місяць тому

    This video posting lines up with the incident time in my local time

  • @denniskrenz2080
    @denniskrenz2080 23 дні тому

    Of course, it seems now easy to blame the young Tuptonov, who retracted the control rods, as part of the chain that led to the accident. But as usual, it would be REALLY interesting to know what motivated him to his choices. Could he have retracted other rods? Or was he already in the Catch-22 situation with or without knowing it?

  • @ukkomies100
    @ukkomies100 4 дні тому

    How does the computer or the cauges not know how many rods are in the reactor.

  • @Shoppingcart0758
    @Shoppingcart0758 Місяць тому +1

    i just saw this video and i clicked instantly on it. I'M CURIOUS!

  • @SunBear69420
    @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +8

    Petition to change the channel name to That Chernobyl Daddy..

    • @SunBear69420
      @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +2

      All kidding aside, keep up the great work!

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +4

      This is not what I expected my first super thanks to be.
      I mean, sure. 100K subs and I'll change it to that for a day.

    • @SunBear69420
      @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +2

      I was going for a little bit of humor instead of the usual, "great video, keep up the good work"

    • @SunBear69420
      @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +2

      You do you, my friend. Im just along for the ride. Seriously though, keep grinding man. You have a lot of talent for this.​@thatchernobylguy2915

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +2

      @@SunBear69420 Seriously, thank you so so much for the super thanks though. It really means a lot :)

  • @JM-ym8mm
    @JM-ym8mm 28 днів тому +1

    "These next few minutes are critical for the survival or demise of the reactor."
    How critical? Prompt Critical?
    Da bum tisss

  • @paulthorwesten7377
    @paulthorwesten7377 Місяць тому

    I just finished the second part. Lucky me

  • @renerpho
    @renerpho Місяць тому

    15:14 "Combined, we now have approximately 6 times the reactivity threshold..."
    I do not understand where you're coming from with this number. There is a beta eff of about 4.5 from the positive void coefficient, and 1.1 from the positive scram effect. Combined, that gives 4.5*1.1=4.95, or about 5. Where does the extra reactivity come from to bring this to about 6?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому

      Not 4.5, 4 or 5.

    • @renerpho
      @renerpho Місяць тому

      @@thatchernobylguy2915 Okay, so the combined beta eff is either 4.4 or 5.5. Where does the "approximately 6" come from?

  • @hayleyxyz
    @hayleyxyz Місяць тому +2

    Another video 😭 you spoil us

  • @phytonso9877
    @phytonso9877 18 днів тому

    Who's dynamite?
    Toptunov's dynamite!
    And when I say he's dynamite
    He's tick tick tick tick tick tick tick BOOM dynamite!

  • @Da_Round_Car
    @Da_Round_Car Місяць тому

    Why was there a bike in the control room?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +1

      The Chernobyl Unit Four Control Room had an exercise bike in real life. The operators needed the opportunity to stretch their legs without leaving the room, so they had installed exercise equipment. Ignalina, for example had a full weightlifting set with a bench.
      You can see the exercise bike in the background of a video in the Control Room before the explosion. Its current fate is unknown.

  • @chriz9959
    @chriz9959 Місяць тому

    so how could this be avoidable? what should have happened in which situation to avoid the explosion? because i think the design alone is not the only reason for the catastrophe

    • @patrikpallos628
      @patrikpallos628 5 днів тому

      Running the test at 700-1000MW level as directed, with the steam bypass/dump vavles open to the condensers, while the turbines freewheeling. That would avoid all the hassle and the excursion at the end.

  • @gmthriver2297
    @gmthriver2297 Місяць тому +2

    LETS GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!

  • @kasel1979krettnach
    @kasel1979krettnach 13 днів тому

    I am fully with Diatlov's analysis that the voiding wasn't the initator of the excursion, but the "2 reactor effect" , that is the graphite insertion via the control rods. The reactor was doomed quite early in my view, althought literally flooded with water and not much voiding can have been present, right ?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  13 днів тому +1

      I agree, and that's what virtually all modern scientific reports agree with :)

    • @KarimY-119
      @KarimY-119 13 днів тому

      @@thatchernobylguy2915 I also think that not just the added feedwater flow drove the rod pull. but simply the fact that at just 200MW thermal AND turbine running the coolant did not contain enough voids in the first place. what i don't understand is that in the video high water temp is pointed out. how can that be an issue at just 200MWth ?

    • @patrikpallos628
      @patrikpallos628 5 днів тому

      @@KarimY-119 They shut off output valves, in a hope that at this power level they could control the reactor, with the increased circulating water for that brief period. I think running the test on 200MW was ultimately a bad idea, they could better control the reactor at the 700-1000MW as level as directed, with the steam bypass vavles open, letting the steam directly to the condensers. That would mitigate the temperature and water level fluctuation in the separator drums and the consequent temperature rise in the bottom of the core.

    • @KarimY-119
      @KarimY-119 5 днів тому

      @@patrikpallos628 agree. I think they were walking in unexplored land and simply ran out of experience.

  • @Ivan_1255
    @Ivan_1255 Місяць тому +1

    Wow views and likes are skyrocketing

  • @SunBear69420
    @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +1

    Chernobyl Guy, why are you so awesome?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +2

      I try my best :)

    • @SunBear69420
      @SunBear69420 Місяць тому +1

      @thatchernobylguy2915 And your best is very good! I wanted to send a super thanks but i dont have the option.. :(

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому

      @@SunBear69420 The super thanks is there.

  • @augiz69
    @augiz69 Місяць тому +1

    nice

  • @eliasthienpont6330
    @eliasthienpont6330 3 дні тому

    🦁🦁🦁🦁🦁 THE LION WAS HERE 🦁🦁🦁🦁🦁 No. 1600

  • @Beaverboy_
    @Beaverboy_ Місяць тому

    Could they have just shut down the reactor during this whole ordeal or no?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +1

      After the second spike in feedwater flow, calculations have shown that pressing AZ-5 would 100% result in an explosion, no matter what. There are other ways of shutting down the reactor, but they had no reason to do them. :)

  • @nuznikas
    @nuznikas Місяць тому

    Firt youtube video on actual facks is born

  • @laurdy
    @laurdy Місяць тому

    Actually Prompt critical is the wrong term - this is used when the Neutron rate is neither increasing or decreasing but is sustained only by Neutrons emitted immediately following a fission rather than those released from the resulting fission products seconds to minutes later. The term you're looking for is "Supercritical"

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Місяць тому +1

      Supercritical would be a βeff between 0 and 1. As βeff reaches 5-6, this is far beyond the value regarded for prompt criticality.
      A similar method of measuring criticality is the dollar system, where 0 dollars = critical, and 1 dollar = prompt critical.
      The values for βeff are given in INSAG-7, the IAEA's 1993 official report on the Chernobyl Disaster.
      I hope this helps. :)

    • @swokatsamsiyu3590
      @swokatsamsiyu3590 Місяць тому +2

      That Chernobyl Guy is actually correct in his terminology. When neutrons aren't going up/down, is called a reactor being critical. It means nothing more than that reactor power is stable at some level, and the neutron generation being used/ being produced is in balance. 1 neutron produced -> 1 neutron being used. That's not prompt criticality, far from it.
      Supercritical is when reactor power is going up. More neutrons are being produced/ used. This in itself isn't necessarily dangerous. You need a very small bit of supercriticality, or else you would never be able to get your reactor back up to power after a maintenance shutdown. And you can be supercritical on delayed neutrons. This is totally normal. Like I said, you'll need some of it to get your reactor back up to power.
      Prompt criticality is something else entirely. It means the reactor is sustaining the fission reaction on prompt neutrons alone, which is very, very bad. At that point you will put your reactor in orbit because there is not a computer system or human in the world that is fast enough to prevent things from spiralling wildly out of control. See Chernobyl Unit 4 for the results of prompt criticality in a power reactor.
      Prompt neutrons -> being born at the moment of a fission event.
      Delayed neutrons -> they appear millisecond to sometimes even minutes from the fission products after a fission event. These are the neutrons we use to be able to control a reactor. Without these, that would be impossible.

    • @theproplady
      @theproplady Місяць тому

      @@swokatsamsiyu3590 Supercritical = "Oh shit, we've got to do something!"
      Prompt Critical = Ka-BOOOOOM!!!!"

  • @hawker131
    @hawker131 Місяць тому +3

    First

  • @jooch_exe
    @jooch_exe Місяць тому +2

    Call me crazy, but i still think the RBMK is an elegant design. It is a big advantage to be able to use low enriched uranium as fuel.
    The management is solely to blame here as they are the ones who should have been more cautious assessing the risks involved of operating such a power plant. Also the supporting technology simply wasn't good enough at the time to provide necessary feedback to the operators. Nuclear reactors are simply too complex to be operated by hand, Three mile island is another great example of this.
    Just like with an F16, without the computer, you would crash.

  • @aaronatwood9298
    @aaronatwood9298 Місяць тому +1

    Safety culture of the USSR was the main issue. Don't say anything that may embarrass the party. Don't call politically advantageous things unsafe. Classify faults so the world and your citezens don't see the problem. So many defective products made in the mismanagement of the planned economy that many things had to be "rigged".
    This accident was easily avoided.

  • @tom5051666
    @tom5051666 14 днів тому

    can't watch this. next time get a voice over that isn't so gay

  • @NionXenion-gh7rf
    @NionXenion-gh7rf Місяць тому +1

    you don't have technical knowledge to talk about tea kettle let alone nuclear reactors

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Місяць тому +1

      Shoot, homey. Writing one sentence without capitalizing the first letter or ending with a punctuation mark doesn't speak highly of how well you understand tea kettles.

    • @swokatsamsiyu3590
      @swokatsamsiyu3590 Місяць тому

      Feel free to enlighten us unwashed peasants, then. I'm sure we're all waiting with bated breath to hear your detailed explanations for both.

    • @OutbackCatgirl
      @OutbackCatgirl 19 днів тому

      i see the cut of your wit has replaced all higher brain functions, nionxenion dash whatever the fuck bot ass username ending you chose

  • @The_Future_isnt_so_Bright
    @The_Future_isnt_so_Bright Місяць тому

    As American college professors would put it nowadays, The explosion took place cause of lack of diversity in the control room. Why was there no black women, or trans black women?

    • @OutbackCatgirl
      @OutbackCatgirl 19 днів тому +1

      no person in real life has ever taken that stance outside of a hypothetical person, otherwise known as a strawman

  • @ProgNoizesB
    @ProgNoizesB Місяць тому

    Ya know how many video's of this are around already? And every video have different versions of what exactly happens. So, DISLIKED. No use to post this after many has done already.

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Місяць тому +4

      And do you know how many of those existing videos are shamefully and demonstrably inaccurate? All of them.

  • @littlesquirtthefireengine5478
    @littlesquirtthefireengine5478 Місяць тому +2

    7:00 You see here in the background, the Russian backup power source in case the diesel generators fail. Simply pedal!

  • @NotSexualAtAll
    @NotSexualAtAll Місяць тому +1

    2N degrees centigrade is not "double" N degrees centigrade. Since the scale does not start at absolute zero.