balanced.exe
0:29
3 жыл бұрын
speed
0:17
3 жыл бұрын
Beirut explosion
2:57
3 жыл бұрын
awp
0:16
4 жыл бұрын
quarantine csgo
0:20
4 жыл бұрын
kassadin
0:39
4 жыл бұрын
Chernobyl (2019) Hospital scene
1:39
Пікірлер
@shadowrunner2510
@shadowrunner2510 2 сағат бұрын
"You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before." Such a chilling line
@alyzu4755
@alyzu4755 5 сағат бұрын
R.I.P Paul Ritter (Dyatlov).
@dirk1998
@dirk1998 8 сағат бұрын
This movie felt like they were trying to marvelize the predator franchise, thankfully it failed.
@rhino202
@rhino202 10 сағат бұрын
The entire Russian nuclear program was a disaster. They made dozens of mistakes at every reactor along the way and covered up other major flaws and catastrophes.
@PiedFifer
@PiedFifer 17 сағат бұрын
A great scene played by superb actors? The envy culture won’t like it. Thank you.
@dalecooper4651
@dalecooper4651 Күн бұрын
So was the first predator in this movie trying to deliver this suit to the humans to help them? I mean, why would the predators own such a suit? lol
@paulsalmon5928
@paulsalmon5928 2 күн бұрын
Perhaps some nation's have no business playing with nuclear anything.
@rosjja
@rosjja 2 күн бұрын
It's free energy 🤑
@vinny142
@vinny142 Күн бұрын
"Perhaps some nation's have no business playing with nuclear anything." SL-1 in '61, Three Mile Island in '79, so I guess the US got to the "some nations shouldn't" stage a lot quicker than the russians. The UK had the Windscale incident in '57. Sure, those did not explode, but then again they also didn't have bombers aircraft carrying actual nuclear bombs flying over the world 24/7 for years, losing several *by accident* in the process. If you want to talk about nations that should not be allowed to have nuclear power, it's most of the nations on the planet. But it's more accurate to say that the nuclear stuff should be left in the hands of people who can actually complete an IQ test, because it only ever goes wrong when powerhungy morons with a brain the size of Trump's d*ck get involved.
@matteostocchero1488
@matteostocchero1488 21 сағат бұрын
Perhaps no nations, considering Fukushima and three mile island.
@geigerbuzz816
@geigerbuzz816 12 сағат бұрын
​@@vinny142best take I've heard on KZfaq, I agree completely
@user-pm7hm2rw3w
@user-pm7hm2rw3w 12 сағат бұрын
Don't believe Western movies about the USSR) In Russian, there is even a special term "klukva" denoting a movie shot by the West, where the Soviet Union is shown from the point of view of Western propaganda, as if this is the case in reality.
@AsJimSeesIt-ox1sk
@AsJimSeesIt-ox1sk 3 күн бұрын
Soooo scary
@versatilpraxis
@versatilpraxis 3 күн бұрын
In other scene legasov suggets they need tons of boron to put out the fire in the core and scherbina goes to get them as it wasn't a big deal so I wonder why they didn't built the roads properly with boron instead of graphite 🤔
@origlllo
@origlllo 3 күн бұрын
It was part of the design. When fully withdrawn, the tips of the control rods would still be moderating neutrons inside the core to some degree, to keep the core stable. Under normal operating parameters, this was perfectly fine. In the very unstable situation that happened that day, this proved to be a major design flaw.
@versatilpraxis
@versatilpraxis 3 күн бұрын
@@origlllo no Bro those were moderating roads designed to slow down the reaction in any given situation, specially in this critical moment, as I said before it seemed they had a lot of boron available so it doesn't make sense to build them with graphite, as the latter was used to accelerate the reaction.
@origlllo
@origlllo 3 күн бұрын
@@versatilpraxis Despite their names, moderatos accelerate the reaction in a reactor. They do so by slowing down neutrons to the point they are more likely to cause more fissions. Control rods by definition are meant to do just that - allow you to control the reaction. Think about it like this - when you fully withdraw a boron control rod, you want to accelerate the reaction. if its tip was also made out of boron, it would still be absorbing neutrons at the outermost position, thus distrupting your neutron flow. By tipping the rods with graphite, you essentialy seal the reactor with a moderator when the control rods are withdrawn, thus increasing the reactivity which is what you want.
@user-pm7hm2rw3w
@user-pm7hm2rw3w 12 сағат бұрын
Do you think it was a lack of boron?) PWR type reactors at power plants have been used in the USSR since the late 50s, and 1 gigawatt capacity since the late 70s, they developed in parallel with RBMK type reactors. The series is based on the usual anti-Soviet propaganda typical of the West. RBMK reactors have their advantages and the possibility of using lower uranium enrichment is also one of them, and not a disadvantage from poverty. Especially considering, as it turned out in the 90s, that Soviet uranium enrichment technologies were the best in the world, including in terms of fuel production costs, and the United States still does not have such technologies. For example, Germany sells its nuclear waste from uranium enrichment to Rosatom, and Rosatom is able to get more fuel from them. Also, only one country in the world had a fast neutron power reactor and that was the USSR, now Russia is developing it. The point is a defect in a specific project, but as we saw at Fukushima and other accidents, there are also disadvantages of PWR.
@behjani1
@behjani1 3 күн бұрын
✝️✝️
@behjani1
@behjani1 3 күн бұрын
😍
@danielpenrodii2389
@danielpenrodii2389 4 күн бұрын
I would’ve liked to seen what Shane Black had in mind for this whole movie without the interference from the studio and uncreative people.
@Player-lw3pr
@Player-lw3pr 4 күн бұрын
First Raccoon city now Chernobyl man Dr Ashford can’t catch a break
@Nill757
@Nill757 4 күн бұрын
Anyone believe that HBO line that the Chernobyl reactor could have killed “the entire continent of Europe”? Nobody died from living in Pripyat, but all Europe was going to die?
@mxmlnlcdcdffmnt2232
@mxmlnlcdcdffmnt2232 Күн бұрын
If no measure add been taken, overtime yes.
@Nill757
@Nill757 19 сағат бұрын
@@mxmlnlcdcdffmnt2232 well they got you then.
@JohnathanRobinzine-xn4lw
@JohnathanRobinzine-xn4lw 4 күн бұрын
Nuclear reactor and Made radiology and nuclear medicine cancer and genetic mutations and isaw the movie the Manhattan project 1985 and wargames the movie 1987
@dash9655
@dash9655 4 күн бұрын
That'ssseveral thousand tons
@TishaHayes
@TishaHayes 4 күн бұрын
Getting 5000 tons of sand is not difficult, getting boron is not difficult. Any commercial glassmaking facility has at least one and probably both in supply. There is a type of silica sand known as borosilicate. It is used to make Pyrex and is 15% boron. Boron is useful because it moderates (dampens) neutron radiation that is the nuclear reaction. Borosilicate sand melts at 1650C and if the reaction was really at 2000C then the sand would melt and merge with the burning uranium/plutonium/graphite and form what was later called 'corium', a highly radioactive form of glass that is at least solid and the incorporated boron will dampen or shut down the nuclear reaction. Commercial power plants (in the rest of the world) often have tanks of highly saturated borated water that can be dumped in to the reactor core, poisoning the reaction. It completely ruins the core but at least has a chance of putting a halt to the reaction. The problem that remains is the removal of heat that comes from blocked up cooling channels (some ironically blocked by boron salts) that may also be from collapsed fuel and core support structures. It is a weird amalgam, improperly mixed with hot zones but the more sand you add the more it dampens the neutrons. The short lived isotopes will go through their decay processes over months and years. The challenge then becomes in keeping water away from the mass. Water can restart the reaction and then you end up with a very hot mass of spongy corium that is more like a geyser of radioactive water, steam and neutron activation products (elements that are daughters of the uranium/ plutonium decay but also of elements that were 'neutron activated' like iron).
@stargazer4683
@stargazer4683 5 күн бұрын
Why the machine didn’t go off when the guy can in?
@bobthebuilder9553
@bobthebuilder9553 5 күн бұрын
I see KZfaq readily allows political ads from Brandon/Camel Toe campaign.
@82dorrin
@82dorrin 5 күн бұрын
Legasov: Shit. I did NOT want to be right...
@Beef1188
@Beef1188 5 күн бұрын
Radiation isn't stupid, it knows to stay the fuck away from Pikalov.
@leociresi4292
@leociresi4292 5 күн бұрын
Makes you wonder if The Fukushima incident happened the same way
@civmaster50
@civmaster50 5 күн бұрын
no. Fukushima suffered from hydrogen explosions and meltown. The cores never exploded.
@leociresi4292
@leociresi4292 5 күн бұрын
@@civmaster50 As I recall, Japan also had a great Tsunami, which didn’t help current matters, either.
@carlosan5300
@carlosan5300 5 күн бұрын
There’s a Netflix series called The Days which is about the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident and the aftermath. It’s similar to this one but at the same time very different and unique.
@collumjiggas
@collumjiggas 5 күн бұрын
no. the backup generators that ran the cooling system were underwater.
@unoriginalusername1748
@unoriginalusername1748 5 күн бұрын
@@collumjiggas Almost like building a nuclear plant so close to the sea in a country prone to tsunamis was a bad idea.
@user-nq8sz6it8s
@user-nq8sz6it8s 6 күн бұрын
Predator Killer vs berserker predator
@phralvim
@phralvim 6 күн бұрын
They just mistook it by 14,997 😅
@RelaxingMusic-gp3st
@RelaxingMusic-gp3st 6 күн бұрын
Typical SpaceX launch
@konradrogowski3330
@konradrogowski3330 9 сағат бұрын
Typical Boeing launch
@LaTengoComoelZague
@LaTengoComoelZague 6 күн бұрын
Does anyone know what happened to that lid? I don’t think it’s ever stated anywhere 🧐
@youtubertoo
@youtubertoo 6 күн бұрын
It blew off
@machich.1368
@machich.1368 6 күн бұрын
The reactor lid (biological shield) fell back sideways into the reactor pit. They actually named it Elena I believe. You can see it in several photographs, with a bunch of the fuel and control rod channels sticking out of it. The crazy thing about the lid was, allegedly, it stayed in the air for ten seconds after the explosion. It's hard to imagine something that heavy flying that high, but it did. There was an expedition in the 1990s which actually had men going into the reactor hall, and there are a few photos of someone standing atop the lid. Cheers.
@robmausser
@robmausser Күн бұрын
It fell back down on the core after flying 30 feet high. Heres a pic of the exposed core and the lid on sideways i.redd.it/smn7xkmmdz231.jpg That round thing you see is the edge of the lid.
@rhino202
@rhino202 10 сағат бұрын
Read Midnight in Chernobyl. Fully factual telling of the entire story
@RonPaul42069
@RonPaul42069 7 күн бұрын
I guess you could say it's... over 9000
@aktchungrabanio6467
@aktchungrabanio6467 7 күн бұрын
This show is hilarious! People think of it as a documentary!
@JachymKvasnicka
@JachymKvasnicka 7 күн бұрын
It's extremely scientifically accurate.
@aktchungrabanio6467
@aktchungrabanio6467 6 күн бұрын
@@JachymKvasnicka 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@kalem1527
@kalem1527 6 күн бұрын
You dumb?
@adrashmadra7149
@adrashmadra7149 6 күн бұрын
@@kalem1527 You dumb, this show is just american propaganda
@GordonSeal
@GordonSeal 6 күн бұрын
@@adrashmadra7149 Oh, poor butthurt Russian can't bear that your glorious empire was nothing but a corrupt scam.
@alexandrossotiropoulos5621
@alexandrossotiropoulos5621 7 күн бұрын
The US sent the Apollo mission to the moon and it took years to complete it, the Russians sent a whole reactor in a few seconds!
@lt.lasereyez8891
@lt.lasereyez8891 Күн бұрын
Moonlanding was shot in a Hollywood studio
@alexandrossotiropoulos5621
@alexandrossotiropoulos5621 Күн бұрын
@@lt.lasereyez8891Probably!
@thecooldude9999
@thecooldude9999 7 күн бұрын
Anyone else notice that the phone handset is put together wrong? The transmitter cap is on the receiver and the receiver cap is on the transmitter. Doesn’t look too comfortable.
@alezaho
@alezaho 7 күн бұрын
Damn that cleaning part is scarier than any horror movie i watched.
@BD-jn5dn
@BD-jn5dn 7 күн бұрын
I find her incredibly hot
@marcdhwaine1382
@marcdhwaine1382 7 күн бұрын
oh shit its got a name
@Lil_Agent-4
@Lil_Agent-4 8 күн бұрын
3200 went beyond 33.000 Me: it’s….it’s over 9000
@joliecide
@joliecide Күн бұрын
What?
@wyattjenkins9688
@wyattjenkins9688 8 күн бұрын
I regret being so excited for this and making a whole night of watching it
@simonthomas5367
@simonthomas5367 8 күн бұрын
The RBMK was an enlarged version of reactors used in Soviet submarines. It was never designed to be the size it was at Chernobyl. The sensors were inadequate. The reactors were so big there wasn't just one reaction but multiple reactions occuring in different parts of the reactor housing at different times. To reduce costs, the designers reduced the number of control rods to the bare minimum. Engineers coming on shift said that controlling an RBMK was similar to driving a rally car blindfolded whilst wearing a set of ear plugs. After the accident, all existing RBMK's were retrofitted with extra control rods, sensors and cooling systems. But not straight away of course as that would be to admit there was a design flaw.
@jacoblas1371
@jacoblas1371 6 күн бұрын
There was no profit motive, so why reduce costs?
@simonthomas5367
@simonthomas5367 6 күн бұрын
@@jacoblas1371 They had no money! Why do you think pure Communism fails every time? It doesn't work
@francesco7695
@francesco7695 4 күн бұрын
The reactors in soviet submarines was pressurized water reactors, a complete different design than the RMBK in Chernobyl, not a sot safer anyway.
@user-pm7hm2rw3w
@user-pm7hm2rw3w 12 сағат бұрын
@@simonthomas5367 why did so many reactors explode in Fukushima due to savings on cooling and power supply systems? Has pure capitalism failed because of a lack of money?)
@_cheeseburger_2007
@_cheeseburger_2007 8 күн бұрын
Imagine someone would stand on those blocks ☠️
@lordhagen2648
@lordhagen2648 7 күн бұрын
Cheap Mars Mission in that case
@_cheeseburger_2007
@_cheeseburger_2007 7 күн бұрын
@@lordhagen2648 Exactly
@jackstheraptor2791
@jackstheraptor2791 7 күн бұрын
At least you are safe from the radioactive material. the only problem is you will come down in sweden, and it's cold there.
@jamiel3902
@jamiel3902 7 күн бұрын
It's a me, Mario!
@jordanjolls2310
@jordanjolls2310 Күн бұрын
Crazy story but some people did stand on the rods at the SL-1 reactor, which also had an incident. One of the men was pierced by one of the control rods and shot up into the ceiling. It’s very chilling. Kyle Hill has a very informative video on the story. You can just look up Kyle Hill SL-1 reactor on KZfaq.
@huguesroland6308
@huguesroland6308 9 күн бұрын
The most terrifying phrase in industrial history: “No one is answering the phone!”
@D2attemp
@D2attemp 9 күн бұрын
So this was what Lord Larys Strong did before becoming Master of Whispers
@TonyFromSyracuse101
@TonyFromSyracuse101 9 күн бұрын
"it means the core is open...it means the fire we are watching with our own eyes is giving off nearly twice the radiation released by the bomb in hiroshima...almost as much as General Pikalov's raincoat"
@jn-merchandise9696
@jn-merchandise9696 9 күн бұрын
That slow look over when they’re spraying him off
@cartoonperson42
@cartoonperson42 10 күн бұрын
I recommend that people research why the control rods had a graphite end....it is a bit more complicated than the series, as excellent as it was, glosses over a bit. It appears the rods gave the operators more control over an extremely large reactor.... I am surmising using more enriched uranium would of led to a more compact reactor and a more robust control rod system. Regardless, it is also clear the operators put the reactor into this position by violating a number of rules.
@quarkonium3795
@quarkonium3795 7 күн бұрын
This is a good point-the real fatal flaw of the reactor was not so much the graphite itself but the fact that the moderation mechanism created a positive void coefficient. Even then, it's possible the accident might have been avoided if the graphite rods went to the bottom of the coolant water but the fact that the graphite displaced water from the bottom of the reactor when the control rods were inserted under the wrong conditions caused too much localized power at the bottom which could flash boil the water and create a runaway chain reaction with that positive void coefficient
@fargo007
@fargo007 7 күн бұрын
Adam Higginbotham's book explains why the graphite tips are there. It wasn't simply expense.
@rhino202
@rhino202 10 сағат бұрын
​@@fargo007reading it now, what an awesome book
@KingDaviiid
@KingDaviiid 10 күн бұрын
This is the clip that got me into watching the entire show. So yeah
@thefinalimperialist5394
@thefinalimperialist5394 10 күн бұрын
Dyatlov were not the bad guy in real life as he is portrait here he actually told the court his coworkers are innocent. He written letters to the families. He never shouted or screamed. Amazing how I first saw him I thought he were a evil guy. check out the court case of Chernobyl you will be amazed
@the_cursor
@the_cursor 9 күн бұрын
He was not great, not terrible. He was knowledgeable and respected but also feared by his subordinates. HBO created a caricature of Dyatlov. In reality, he was just one cog in the machine and a convenient scapegoat.
@goldy6674
@goldy6674 2 күн бұрын
So you would believe the documents a country put out........... The same country that lied over and over...... And lied about chernobyl catastrophe..... And continues to lie after rebranding...? I hope you don't have a car license or something, because you aren't exactly smarter than a dog.
@user-pm7hm2rw3w
@user-pm7hm2rw3w 12 сағат бұрын
@@goldy6674 ты про ту страну, официальный представитель которой лгал на весь мир в оон размахивая пробиркой?)
@thirien59
@thirien59 10 күн бұрын
I’m actually wondering : as soon as he opens the window the alarm rings : does it mean the radiation could invade the whole room in the 3 seconds he opened the window ?
@vermillionwarrior3968
@vermillionwarrior3968 10 күн бұрын
What happened to those two sniveling party rats in charge of the reactor, i wonder? 🤔
@svitak1987
@svitak1987 11 күн бұрын
"The chain of disasters is now complete" Astonishing!!!
@InfiniteNaos
@InfiniteNaos 11 күн бұрын
No matter the nation, their history, or their moral compasses. There are some hero’s among them when problems arise.
@dirdib69
@dirdib69 11 күн бұрын
I would guess it was actually more than 15000, and that was just the upper limit of the high-range docimeter.
@krisandketo
@krisandketo 11 күн бұрын
This series was excellently shot.