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originally posted by: ThothHermes
ITER & the german Stellarator are our hope
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
Then you should be thrilled with MIT and Lockheed since fusion is vastly safer than 1960's fission tech.
originally posted by: ThothHermes
The stellarator is the most advanced device man has built .
The Tokamak design is cheaper but produces a toroidal plasma current that makes it a bit more unstable than the Stellarator . The Chinese are pushing tokamak tech big time . German = Precision, reliable but very complicated.
originally posted by: tanstaafl
originally posted by: ThothHermes
The stellarator is the most advanced device man has built .
From what little I read, they are not ready for prime time, and not just by a little?
But if I'm wrong, would appreciate a few links to jumpstart my getting caught up.
LFTR tech is essentially ready for prime time now.
Thanks again!
originally posted by: tanstaafl
Which makes it very clear that you are clueless when it comes to LFTR tech even at the 1960s state, much less the amazing advancements that have been made since.
originally posted by: ThothHermes
The Tokamak design is cheaper but produces a toroidal plasma current that makes it a bit more unstable than the Stellarator . The Chinese are pushing tokamak tech big time . German = Precision, reliable but very complicated.
Russian = Reliable, cheaper but more crude .
Im sure the Japanese will take all of it and perfect it at some point .
Liquid sodium is dangerous. The Russians ran a similar idea in a few subs & it was not good . The future is fusion . LFTR is another molten liquid fuel idea and can work , but its not going to replace tokamaks or stellarators as the preferred. Fusion reactors im guessing may take another 100 yrs before their cost & power in/out is at a feasible cost . My opinions only . 30yrs Ive spent working in our worlds nuclear plants and they are tired and in need of closure due to being outdated. Pebble Bed Reactors are more than likely our near future .
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
originally posted by: tanstaafl
Which makes it very clear that you are clueless when it comes to LFTR tech even at the 1960s state, much less the amazing advancements that have been made since.
Maybe you should let MIT and Lockheed know since they seem to be clueless as well Mr. Admittedly I Don't Have A Nuclear Engineering Degree.
originally posted by: ThothHermes
Liquid sodium is dangerous. The Russians ran a similar idea in a few subs & it was not good . The future is fusion . LFTR is another molten liquid fuel idea and can work , but its not going to replace tokamaks or stellarators as the preferred. Fusion reactors im guessing may take another 100 yrs before their cost & power in/out is at a feasible cost . My opinions only . 30yrs Ive spent working in our worlds nuclear plants and they are tired and in need of closure due to being outdated. Pebble Bed Reactors are more than likely our near future .
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
originally posted by: tanstaafl
Which makes it very clear that you are clueless when it comes to LFTR tech even at the 1960s state, much less the amazing advancements that have been made since.
Maybe you should let MIT and Lockheed know since they seem to be clueless as well Mr. Admittedly I Don't Have A Nuclear Engineering Degree.
The world will be on fire before mass use fusion is realised.
I personally think humans need a tech revolt and demand that our money & minds go towards free energy. Instead people write their Congress if there internet is slow ????
If fusion offers freedom…? Then you can bet it will be shelved and only used as ploys to hack huge grant money , so the mad scientist have their toys .
We are 250-500 yrs from world wide clean/ safe energy…. If ever . God be with us all . So Mote It Be
originally posted by: Vroomfondel
I always suspected it wasn't about stopping the destruction of the planet, just avoiding blame for the end result.
Very volatile substance in h2o . Im stll amazed that we have not developed high tech thermal systems ?
originally posted by: Justoneman
originally posted by: ThothHermes
Liquid sodium is dangerous. The Russians ran a similar idea in a few subs & it was not good . The future is fusion . LFTR is another molten liquid fuel idea and can work , but its not going to replace tokamaks or stellarators as the preferred. Fusion reactors im guessing may take another 100 yrs before their cost & power in/out is at a feasible cost . My opinions only . 30yrs Ive spent working in our worlds nuclear plants and they are tired and in need of closure due to being outdated. Pebble Bed Reactors are more than likely our near future .
originally posted by: AugustusMasonicus
originally posted by: tanstaafl
Which makes it very clear that you are clueless when it comes to LFTR tech even at the 1960s state, much less the amazing advancements that have been made since.
Maybe you should let MIT and Lockheed know since they seem to be clueless as well Mr. Admittedly I Don't Have A Nuclear Engineering Degree.
The world will be on fire before mass use fusion is realised.
I personally think humans need a tech revolt and demand that our money & minds go towards free energy. Instead people write their Congress if there internet is slow ????
If fusion offers freedom…? Then you can bet it will be shelved and only used as ploys to hack huge grant money , so the mad scientist have their toys .
We are 250-500 yrs from world wide clean/ safe energy…. If ever . God be with us all . So Mote It Be
The Sodium metal cannot exist on earth in a solid state due to the shape of the atom being so attracted to water molecules. So much so that an explosive reaction takes place.
True story from my college days one of my undergrad Organic professors was from Emory University in Atlanta. He was discussing Sodium solid metal (yes an Inorganic molecule). He said at one of the PhD level classes one day they were told of Sodium being reactive to the point of being very dangerous. That afternoon in the men's room there was an explosion. Everyone there runs to the men's room to find a student on one side of the bathroom from the exploded urinal. He didn't get out of the way on time but did live to be the butt of all the jokes for the rest of time at Emory. He only had a piece the size of a pebble.