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#1
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Thats why I dont see the techs just abandoning the nuke plants unless they are in areas where they had fallout - and many plants have small backup generators made to keep those pumps working - and if anything probably didnt have mobs all over them pillaging and wrecking it was probably nuke plants - after Three Mile Island and Chernobyl no one would want to wreck a nuclear plant no matter how crazy they were
which is not to say they kept the plant on line - but you could see dedicated techs with locals helping out (who really dont want a cloud of fallout all over their houses) making just enough fuel to keep those pumps working - could be the source of an adventure - you get hired by such a group and promised spare parts or fuel or whatever to get critically needed parts for their pumps to avoid a meltdown - that just happen to be in a closely guarded town held by a marauder group Also one thing to keep in mind - are you talking about a short term source of electricity like car batteries that eventually must be recharged using fuel to do so - or are you talking about long term electrical generation using solar panels or windmills or water power? Last edited by Olefin; 07-17-2014 at 09:15 AM. |
#2
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I tried to find a thread that was on this forum about a year or so ago. We were discussing using auto alternators and lawn mowers. Many lawn mowers (mine included) use the pull string style of ignition. TO the best of my understanding, this type of engine is EMP proof. So IF you can get gasoline, and IF you rig up the alternator, you can come up with some electricity.
At which point you can worry about the DC to AC problems, voltage problems, etc. All of which have been discussed above. My $0.02 Mike |
#3
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Keep in mind that who knows how many people may have bought portable generators in the lead up to the war. They were available back in the 90's - and with the war scare you could have a lot of them in private hands in the US and Canada.
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#4
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I think that the only reason they would stay is if someone with perceived authority (e.g. a local politician or a rep from the government) or a warlord/dictator "encouraged" them to stay. I strongly doubt that people would just "come together" to keep any powerplant operating, they would have to be shown that there is a very tangible benefit for not only staying in the area but also helping to keep the plant operating (or a lack of reward of even punishment if they choose the opposite course). The fear of nuclear power is still prevalent even today and after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant was ruined by the tidal wave in 2011, we can see just how people react to the presence of damaged nuclear powerplants. During the course of a global war in which nuclear weapons are used, I can't imagine many people at all would be happy to live near any nuclear power station - not unless some organized group took control and encouraged people to do so because it takes a hell of a lot of resources to run and maintain any powerplant let alone a nuclear one. For instance, in a large number of plants, the pumps that circulate the cooling water use diesel fuel, the only way they'll keep operating after the diesel runs out is if someone with the know-how converts them to alcohol or electric or someone can trade for a steady supply of diesel - that alone takes organization on a level that most survivors won't be thinking about... unless there is some sort of leader/group in charge and they have the resources necessary to allow it and even then for a group numbering less than a hundred adults, it probably isn't worth the resources to do it. |
#5
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I saw an article in the local paper a few years back where there are Cat gensets running off of the gas collected from landfills west of Chicago. I believe the capacity at one site was 35,000 homes. They had a nice photo of several lined up in a row. Use only what you need, keep some for ready spares and for spare parts, and there you go.
For years after a restoration the Hotel Baker on the Fox River in St. Charles IL had restored power from a water turbine at the dam (about an 8-10 foot drop, the Fox isn't deep around here) right next to the building. They had a setup showing what it was generating that you could view from the street...cool olde-timey gauges and dials. It's been a while since I looked, but I'll check into it. For years Cat and Kohler (amongst others) have made trailer amounted portable generators that fit in a 40 foot trailer. I see these being used to keep essential services online like the at least some of the local hospitals. If you are out in the middle of nowhere and can keep enough juice going to make and store basic medicines like described in Free City and Armies of the Night, you are a beacon of hope. Better plan to defend it when the word gets out though... Dave -Dave |
#6
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Also remember that many nuclear power plants were located by rivers and oceans for a reason - in a worst case you could see them using that to cool the spent rods - but at a cost of contaminating the river, lake, seacoast, etc..
and again another reason for Three Mile Island being operational or at the least the rods kept properly cooled - as Allegheny Uprising says the governor is in Harrisburg with a force of troops to keep the area under control - which woudlnt have happened if it had melted down and spread radiation over the entire area (its basically right next to Harrisburg) that implies either a successful shutdown and the spent rods are being properly cooled - or its operational in some way |
#7
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You know, speaking of generators...I think about this periodically as I drive around here. Lift Stations have generators to run the pumps; I would think if you went through a completely abandoned neighborhood, one of those would be fine pickings...only downside is they're powered by LP gas which would be scarce.
(For the unfamiliar, a lift station is a pump that works against gravity and keeps sewage moving in the right direction through the lines)
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THIS IS MY SIG, HERE IT IS. |
#8
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well in many of my T2K and MP campaigns i have at least one town with a junkyard where they strip the alternators from every vehicle they can and build either a wind farm or water wheel to power the town. (its a good Macguffin for sneaking in higher tech levels to resupply at in Morrow Project)
i could easily see something like that (or even a coal-steam powerplant) built in my area following TEOTWAWKI with the college nearby and the metal fittings factory in town with junk yards and abandoned coal mines dotting the landscape.
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the best course of action when all is against you is to slow down and think critically about the situation. this way you are not blindly rushing into an ambush and your mind is doing something useful rather than getting you killed. |
#9
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You just have to think where would power be generated and think 19th century as to anything above isolated small scale generation
water power wind power coal fired generators near areas that still have relatively easy to get at deposits with the occasional solar powered source (remember they were relatively rare in 1995 versus today), surviving nuclear stations (all with pretty big garrisons around) and diesel generators that can either burn unrefined fuel straight from nearby wells or that are combined with a surviving refinery near operational wells with much of the power being used to keep that refinery alive (most likely the situation in places like Robinson IL and Oklahoma where MilGov still has operational refineries |
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