Aint' that always the way. I don't know what it is about nuke plants that
makes management so stupid, maybe it's all those boiler chemicals in the
air. I know Morpholine didn't do my sense of smell any good. Everything is
an emergency until they decide to ignore it. I worked on an emergency
project to retool the remote filter changing system so that we could
actually use it instead of crawling down into hot areas and doing it
manually. After three months of "emergency" work the project quietly died.
On my last day at the plant two years later I climbed down into the filter
pit and changed yet another filter by hand.
-----Original Message-----
From: WEmery7451@aol.com [mailto:WEmery7451@aol.com]
Sent: Monday, September 10, 2001 5:26 AM
To: wdayton@attglobal.net; fot@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Tyres, Non Tech
In a message dated 9/9/01 8:09:17 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
wdayton@attglobal.net writes:
<< Another example of creative Australian "hoarding". >>
The US should learn a few things from Australia. I was told to look into
replacing the refrigerant, R-12 in relatively new 500 ton chillers at the
Unit 2, Beaver Valley nuclear plant. It was a big emergency to go with a
new
environmentally friendly refrigerant. My final answer was that these
chillers are in good shape. Horde R-12 in the warehouse. You will not
lose
money. The price will always increase. They did the usual -- nothing. I
do
not know nor do I care what they are doing now, since I am retired.
I use to talk to two ex-WW2 veterans in my youthful days. One had the job
after the war smashing army pocket watches with a hammer. The other had
the
job of shoving new Jeeps off a ship into the ocean. They didn't want to
bring the Jeeps back to the US and ruin the US auto industry.
Events happen faster today. Maybe the US can trash themselves out of
existence in 300 years, where it took Rome 1,000 year to accomplish this
task.
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