I like kissing girls not boys but!im still cool with boykisser s so dont hate me cuz im a soviet now not a boykisser☭
@mewified27 күн бұрын
OF COURSE WE STRAIGHT FELLAS LOVE KISSING BOYS‼️‼️🔥🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️
@MissilemanIIIАй бұрын
I'd like to work there.
@JBF-GST-TandaАй бұрын
All sorts of bells and chimes and klaxons and buzzers and... probably small air horns?
@SalaoLaBrasaАй бұрын
I like boys. I fight men. Train my whole life to be the best.
@Jon-cb9dtАй бұрын
Water pressure in to reactor, water pressure out of the reactor. Neutron propagation , stand by control rod insertion, standby diesel backup for cooling water , slow reaction in core reduce 10%. Notification of potential reactor shutdown to all on list. Verify cooling system flow with no cavitation of steam in out flow cooling water.
@fzxfzxfzxАй бұрын
fire, wonder why u can’t find it anywhere official from benn himself
@JosephReneau-lf2imАй бұрын
Greeeeen
@Hizotar2 ай бұрын
Аааааа почему я фурри?!
@Rontharp2 ай бұрын
High water level in the reactor. What level? Level 8 sir. Can someone turn of the damn alarm I can't think with all that going off.
@fabien592 ай бұрын
Sympa
@leeksoup31992 ай бұрын
i was hoping to find more nuclear power station control room videos
@user-wd8gk8dl1g2 ай бұрын
I'm getting flashbacks from China Syndrome.
@calebsanders82863 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, takes me waaay back to high school days man. Hanging with my friends on our bikes and chilling to this and aphex twin. God i miss those days. Peace
@Sidicas3 ай бұрын
why did youtube autoplay decide to play this at 3am? 😅
@perryrush65634 ай бұрын
Someone call Homer Simpson!
@nonyafkinbznes14204 ай бұрын
0:07 I keep expecting the Mission Impossible theme song to start.
@SkypowerwithKarl4 ай бұрын
Where’s the control room that screws with the training room
@GyroCoder4 ай бұрын
Found your channel through the nuclear control room thing and coincidentally you also have furry stuff and Drum n' Bass, same hivemind wow!!
@orangie84264 ай бұрын
Wow!! Its true!!! All those cartoons and video game reactor alarm sound effects... They really do make those weird sounds
@lonnybush56124 ай бұрын
Looks like the bridge of the Battlestar Galactica. 😛
@ebgwd4 ай бұрын
Reactor Trip (verified 4 indicators checked), Turbine Trip (check breakers, steam admission valves and lack of load), Power to 1E busses (check voltage and pot lights), had SI actuated? (check 4 inputs, any auto alignment of SI components or SI signals present). If not SI then pull E0 procedure, IF SI indicated or actuated then continue with other 12 steps of automatic operator actions and then pull E1 procedure. If you are up for the "game" then you can expect after each scenario about an hour going over questions and the video explaining how and why you performed every movement/action/communication during the "game". Of course, leave your feelings outside and don't take comments or critique as personal but instead as a way to improve reliability and performance, thus improving safety. Yes, you are graded and if you fail then you are given more training and once chance to reperform but it will not be the exact same simulation. If you fail twice then leave your badge and keys with your supervisor or HR.
@douggolde75824 ай бұрын
I’d love to see the room where the simulation is controlled from. Program a Kobayashi Maru.
@dwarfer15 ай бұрын
tf kind if simulation am i looking at, a description would be helpful or would you prefer we guess
@johnnyfive14125 ай бұрын
Who is the lazy guy sitting with his arms crossed?
@johnleeson69465 ай бұрын
Damn "Pepsi Syndrome" again...
@johnleeson69462 ай бұрын
Great SNL reference. Dan Aykroyd as Jimmy Carter and Garrett Morris as the cleaning lady! Not "cleaning woman." That would make Rigby Readon go nuts...
@johnleeson69465 ай бұрын
Navy nuke here. You don't say, "twenty-five." You say, "two five." Communications are KEY in the operation of a nuclear power plant!
@21Walls5 ай бұрын
You can't convince me they didn't raid the stock alarm sounds of the Doctor Who sound mixers for these alarms. Brilliant. 😂
@davidbrewer79375 ай бұрын
How does anyone function properly when alarm sirens are screaming...
@awesomesir455 ай бұрын
Lots of training in the simulator. After doing a Loss of Coolant Casualty so many times, you can memorize what alarms come in and when they do. That also doesn't count the numerous times these operators have read the procedure for qualification/testing. Like others have said, the reactor is protecting itself with built-in Reactor Protection Systems that have multiple redundancies to insure the core remains covered with water.
@josephastier74215 ай бұрын
I expected to hear Captain Kirk barking orders to everyone there.
@AxelWerner5 ай бұрын
Holy shit!! So many parameters... NOT FUN!!!
@Puddingskin015 ай бұрын
This a vast improvement over past alarms, where all you got was the blaring sound of the reactor exploding.
@user-zp6ff2gr4n5 ай бұрын
How can anyone give orders in a racket like that?
@asystole_6 ай бұрын
Told them it was a bad idea to build a nuclear plant in the backrooms.
@asystole_6 ай бұрын
The first minute of this video is the inside of my brain when work is stressful
@bmwem92916 ай бұрын
A relatively large number of comments below reference what appears to be chaos, people running around, and other thoughts that certainly are not accurate and do not reflect what happens in the real world. The word "terrifying" was used in one comment. There are also many comments about things the operators are required to do that are misinterpreted in a negative way. I feel a need to clarify what really happens as, although retired for a number of years now, I feel compelled to provide an accurate picture of what really occurs and it is certainly not what is portrayed above. This appears to me to be a very informal amateur video during maybe even an impromptu demonstration event. There are far too many people in the control room and people are distractingly wandering around in places they do not need to be or belong. The real event (control room and simulator) will typically have only two board operators (manipulating the controls), one unit supervisor managing the event and reading the procedure, and the senior manager/supervisor in a mostly silent out of the way, but absolutely vital role, keeping the big picture. In a simulator scenario/evaluation there will always additionally be mostly a single floor instructor/evaluator but that person(s) stay(s) back in an unobtrusive position. Control room staff all wear "uniforms" that might only be a defined color slacks (like dockers) and either a button down color defined shirt or polo shirt (usually with a logo printed on them). As part of the culture to maintain an unremitting highly professional atmosphere, jeans, T shirts, etc. became banned in the mid 80s at most plants. There is also a lot less distracting chaotic noise level than portrayed by this video. The annunciator alarm sounds are still there but not once in my years of experience were they so loud to be distracting. In fact, it was never my experience that the noise level ever reached a level to require anything more than a slightly raised voice. The alarm is loud enough to be sure it is heard but never so loud to require shouting over it to be heard. The type of sound is not harsh, at least in the plants I am familiar with. I also never experienced the annoying unrelenting cacophony of so many multiple different audible alarms at the same time. The beginning of an event almost always eventually results with a number of annunciators coming in (sometimes many). This, of course, immediately gets the operators attention. The need for a reactor and/or turbine trip very quickly becomes obvious (if needed - might be a manageable instrument malfunction) and, if so, instantly drives the two board operators into their four immediate actions (as in the event above and applicable for the Westinghouse plant above). Its hard to hear but the operators calling out their immediate actions can be heard. The pointing at instruments and controls is a required and trained response that 1) is an excellent human error reduction thing and 2) lets an evaluator know one is looking at the right things. If there is a need for a reactor and/or turbine trip, no matter what, requires going to the entry point procedure in the EOP (Emergency Operating Procedure) network or package. The unit supervisor (the woman above) then starts reading the procedure. She starts reading after she hears the call outs from the board operators to the four immediate actions. She starts at step 1 reading/repeating the already completed immediate actions and continues directing step by step from the procedure. The EOP package is comprehensively designed to diagnose, verify, direct everything, and take effective action if a "Response Not Obtained (RNO)". No one takes any action that is not directed by the supervisor with verbatim compliance to the procedure she is reading. Also, every verbal instruction/communication requires a three-way verification and independent verification is required for every control manipulation - none of that is seen above. In parallel with this, there is an appropriately trained and degreed engineer present (a post TMI requirement), called a Shift Technical Advisor (STA), that also is required to stay out of the way, keep the big picture, and monitor a different set of critical but very high priority parameters. In the real control room, all unnecessary personnel will be immediately ushered out of the controlled area (probably the entire control room) and the only people remaining will be those directly responding to the event. The overall order, deliberate responses, lack of any but necessary conversation, professionalism, etc. conveys a very calm controlled environment, not at all the chaos that is felt in the video above. If you could see a real event taking place, not an informal demo, there would be much less people and movement, the annunciators would be silenced more frequently (albeit not locked in), much structure to everyone's actions and motions, and an overall slow deliberate order/response type thing taking place. I did check out a few other videos but a brief search found nothing that truly provides the satisfying, albeit complex, deliberate, precise, well trained dance, that actually defines these events. The operations world in commercial power is an arcane culture with many components not at all obvious to those not exposed to it. Please keep this in mind when forming opinions of these videos. It is now heavily influenced by the nuclear navy approach (I was not in the military). There are exceptions to everything but that is extremely limited in this world as human error prevention, structure, verbatim procedural compliance, professionalism absolutely apply to everything, even the response to a worst case accident. There is zero reason, ever, for an operator to take sudden heroic action and any operator that comes into this world with a hero mindset does not succeed (I have see people kicked out of the program for that). Again, I have to emphasize, the chaotic depiction in the video above does not represent the real world, at least in any plant I was in over a 40+ year career, 20 years of which were directly associated with operations (I held an SRO). The real world is actually much more mundane and would make piss poor material for a movie if accuracy was important.
@not_my_username5 ай бұрын
Four-loop SRO here… I am aligned with this comment in entirety.
@crabbyhayes1076Ай бұрын
Well-said. The Nuclear Navy has brought a positive safety and communications culture to nuclear power. But, as you also know, commercial nuclear plant operators have always had a similar mindset, since many of these people have the same, or similar, backgrounds. These plants do differ greatly from nuclear powered vessels in their size, complexity, and operation. And, as you can attest, the emergency response of a nuclear power plant's safety systems happens in a blink of the eye, so the key role of the operator, and the entire crew, is to monitor and manage these actions - adding an additional level of oversight and intelligence to the systems and their responses. And these actions are all governed by rigorous adherence to the procedures - reinforced by extensive training.
@cambo12006 ай бұрын
Protocol is to pour a bucket of water on the console.
@realdomdom6 ай бұрын
Sorry, but that voice is just annoying. Nothing she could do to change that.