Five Weird Nuclear Powered Machines

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Sideprojects

Sideprojects

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 532
@Sideprojects
@Sideprojects 3 ай бұрын
Try Huel with 15% OFF today using code SIDEPROJECTS at my.huel.com/SIDEPROJECTS Fuel your best performance with Huel today!
@bruceanderson8588
@bruceanderson8588 3 ай бұрын
Cricky that thing looks like it houses used uranium and from your face it probably does
@azdirtrider88
@azdirtrider88 2 ай бұрын
Is it nuclear powered?
@jonolliexb
@jonolliexb 2 ай бұрын
@@azdirtrider88😅😅😅😅
@LeoHKepler
@LeoHKepler Ай бұрын
We used to just call that Ensure... @ about $2 a bottle rather than $5 no less.
@UkDave3856
@UkDave3856 Ай бұрын
@@Sideprojects or you could just eat…you know….real food
@AG3n3ricHuman
@AG3n3ricHuman 3 ай бұрын
It should be mentioned that the Plutonium-238 in the pacemakers primarily emits alpha radiation which is easily blocked. That's why it didn't require an enormous amount of shielding and why it is preferred in RTGs.
@NinoJoel
@NinoJoel 2 ай бұрын
The main problem was more the heat from burning the corpse and the spreading material from the fire
@nutgone100
@nutgone100 Ай бұрын
When my granddad died my mother had to pay for them to remove his pacemaker. That’s the good old British NHS for you. Likelihood is it was sold on to a third world country too, so they got paid twice.
@AdamMansbridge
@AdamMansbridge 3 ай бұрын
I think we need a megaprojects video on Simon's video empire
@elfpimp1
@elfpimp1 3 ай бұрын
I second that!😁👍
@Dimi.Petrov
@Dimi.Petrov 3 ай бұрын
Indeed, at this point I’ve lost count of how many channels he has
@J.A.Smith2397
@J.A.Smith2397 2 ай бұрын
I'm saying, does ANYONE know how many channels he's got!?!?!? I bet he's done forgot after handing over writing AND videos on some channels lol
@vickiewallace415
@vickiewallace415 2 ай бұрын
NOW WE ARE TALKING!
@chesimons8862
@chesimons8862 2 ай бұрын
Megaprojects:Megaprojects?
@otama
@otama 3 ай бұрын
The Ford Nucleon inspired a series of nuclear powered cars in the universe of the Fallout games. The most notorious example is the "Chryslus Corvega"
@elfpimp1
@elfpimp1 3 ай бұрын
I think you can still buy scale models of that Nucleon too.
@XtreeM_FaiL
@XtreeM_FaiL 3 ай бұрын
It leak.
@E-d1d3
@E-d1d3 2 ай бұрын
"A small, rear mounted nuclear reactor" How fun was that to say?
@bmxerkrantz
@bmxerkrantz 2 ай бұрын
heck... do they have a Chrysler Turbine derivative in there?
@freeyourmind112358
@freeyourmind112358 2 ай бұрын
Nerd
@scottthomas3792
@scottthomas3792 2 ай бұрын
My grandmother had a radioisotope pacemaker....'72 or '73....the mercury batteries of the time had to be changed every six months, and some patients couldn't withstand surgery that often, so the radioisotope version was an option.
@r.awilliams9815
@r.awilliams9815 3 ай бұрын
The Soviets weren't the only ones to build RTGs. The USA built them as well, both for use in spacecraft and for powering equipment in remote areas.
@sage5296
@sage5296 2 ай бұрын
probes especially, the iconic Voyager probe uses an RTG. Some of the non-critical instruments have had to be gradually shut down, as the half life of the material means the RTG produces a bit less power every year compared to the last, but it's still out there and working. It uses Pu-238, which has a halflife of about 90 years, so it's still got plenty of juice left tho
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 2 ай бұрын
@@sage5296 sadly they are near the end of it's usable lifetime. While they continue to provide power, there is a point when they don't generate enough to keep the instruments running. But my favorite thing is the software update they deployed last year.
@chriswhite8852
@chriswhite8852 2 ай бұрын
Baltimore Harbor Lighthouse had an RTG in the sixties.
@JDs_RandomHandle
@JDs_RandomHandle Ай бұрын
I actually had a college professor who built and tested the ones on the voyager missions for the communication equipment. When Voyager 2 passed Pluto and sent the pictures back to Earth he told us it was a weird feeling knowing that something he designed and tested over 40 years prior just turned on for the first time and actually worked.
@jamesotisjr2322
@jamesotisjr2322 3 ай бұрын
Predicting future technology was a big industry back in the 50s. An artist named Frank Tinsley was a major player. I can't think of one thing he predicted that came to exist.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 2 ай бұрын
Recently watched a prediction programme from 1972 on how life in the year 2000 could be. Some of that came true earlier, some later, some hasn't as of yet.
@morsumbra9692
@morsumbra9692 2 ай бұрын
Arthur Clarke, Isaac asimov, and Robert Heinlein were all part of a military "futurists" program, mean to predict how society, logistics, and communication would advance and change. we got ALOT of good books because of all that 😂
@davidmoore8741
@davidmoore8741 3 ай бұрын
Nuke powered pace maker vs lithium, i think id rather have the nuke one honestly lol
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 3 ай бұрын
1:05 - Chapter 1 - Icebreakers 3:05 - Mid roll ads 4:30 - Back to the video 6:45 - Chapter 2 - Cars 9:55 - Chapter 3 - Aircraft 14:00 - Chapter 4 - Pacemakers 17:45 - Chapter 5 - Lighthouses
@FranckLarsen
@FranckLarsen 3 ай бұрын
Nicely done 👌
@RobertCraft-re5sf
@RobertCraft-re5sf 2 ай бұрын
If anyo e wants an actually good account of Russian lighthouses look up The Soviet Unions Deadly Abandoned Nuclear Generators. It also has amazing footage of the Lia incident cleanup.
@eopest
@eopest 2 ай бұрын
Thanks, dude. Simon drones on and on sometimes...
@mooneyes2k478
@mooneyes2k478 2 ай бұрын
Golden. All the kudos.
@leonardbrookes6936
@leonardbrookes6936 2 ай бұрын
​@@RobertCraft-re5sf I think I've seen that one. That about the small portable reactors the Soviet Union built and then just left abandoned? And a group of 3 guys from (I think) Lithuania found one in the forest and used it to keep warm when they were gathering firewood?
@hotsauce2446
@hotsauce2446 2 ай бұрын
It's unfortunate nuclear radiation is so harmful, we could all have our own nuclear generators
@jasonmansfieldsr8645
@jasonmansfieldsr8645 Ай бұрын
I recall seeing a PopMech article or maybe it was Machine Design maybe 20-25 years ago that indicated public use of household reactors using thorium (?) for fuel…
@Sujamma_Enjoyer
@Sujamma_Enjoyer 20 күн бұрын
It’s really not harmful you are are exposed to radiation 24/7 in your home and when your outside the difference is the concentration and time spent around unshielded string sources
@davidhughes4089
@davidhughes4089 3 ай бұрын
I think a nuclear powered watch would be still be safer than a Lebanese pager
@elfpimp1
@elfpimp1 3 ай бұрын
🤣👍🤙
@the80hdgaming
@the80hdgaming 3 ай бұрын
Operation Grim Beeper...
@Daeno5
@Daeno5 3 ай бұрын
Even safer than a Kibbutz!
@AdamtheRed-
@AdamtheRed- 3 ай бұрын
The terrorist state could mess with watches just as easily as a pager.
@bmstylee
@bmstylee 3 ай бұрын
To soon? Nah we good.
@bj20715
@bj20715 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear rocket engines would have been interesting to include, especially the SLAM missile, which carried several nuclear warheads to drop along the way as it casually spewed radiation out of its fission-heated jet engine. And don't forget the USNS Savannah, the only US commercial nuclear ship I believe.
@joelfenner
@joelfenner 2 ай бұрын
NS Savannah functioned just fine (I recall her record being fairly uneventful). But her cargo hold was undersized for efficient freight use, and a lot of civilian ports didn't want to let her dock or get particularly close on the off chance she'd have a problem while moored there (even a conventional fire) that might cause local contamination. Can't blame them, really, given she was first of her kind and an unknown. It's not so much that she was a fundamentally bad concept or had operational problems. But the risk/reward ratio wasn't there.
@drunkenhobo8020
@drunkenhobo8020 3 ай бұрын
Surprised car-sized laser-equipped autonomous rovers on Mars weren't part of this list!
@233kosta
@233kosta 2 ай бұрын
Frickin' "lasers"
@robertgaines-tulsa
@robertgaines-tulsa 3 ай бұрын
RTG's really are fantastic devices. Just don't forget about them. I don't know if they are still in use here on Earth. For space missions beyond Jupiter, RTG's are crucial as at that distance, the sun is just too weak to power solar cells. Certain satellites also use them. I believe all military satellites use them as well as satellites in geostationary orbit. Geostationary orbit is far beyond where astronauts normally go. At the end of their life, they are boosted into a graveyard orbit even more farther out.
@Ixidora
@Ixidora 2 ай бұрын
We should pile them up in one of the Lagrange points for easy collection later, enough of them collect there and we get a mini moon on the other hand
@LawrenceBishton
@LawrenceBishton 2 ай бұрын
Well 14 years ago she says to me your going on a trip to Ibiza her Bobby John's just gone 66 up north lother says your like 007 wee English fellows I swear to god it's non stop list of fuck orders of scrap iron because of my sweating I'm more catholic than the 1 that berried me for carrying the cross about like monty IPphone py
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 2 ай бұрын
Don't the russians operate a whole fleet of RTG powered lighthouses up north?
@spannaspinna
@spannaspinna 2 ай бұрын
There is thousands of them unaccounted for from the Soviet era
@throwback19841
@throwback19841 2 ай бұрын
the Apollo 13 RTG survived reentry and was recovered from the ocean, because the LEM returned to earth.
@ronlange1380
@ronlange1380 3 ай бұрын
Huel is carnation instant breakfast, and it also came in strawberry. A Canadian legend.
@Shore215
@Shore215 3 ай бұрын
I love me some carnation instant breakfast.
@UkDave3856
@UkDave3856 3 ай бұрын
It’s ultra processed garbage is what it is. Its certainly not food
@maxbracegirdle9990
@maxbracegirdle9990 2 ай бұрын
​@@UkDave3856 It's not meant to be food though
@UkDave3856
@UkDave3856 2 ай бұрын
@@maxbracegirdle9990 that’s not what they claim in their many KZbin sponsorships. They regularly claim that their product is a meal replacement
@sheonlywearsblack
@sheonlywearsblack 2 ай бұрын
"Combustable dinosaurs" sounds like a metal band ☠
@Hawk7886
@Hawk7886 2 ай бұрын
Sounds more like post rock tbh
@gomezgomezian3236
@gomezgomezian3236 24 күн бұрын
Really need to avoid making jokes like "combustable dinosaurs". There are a LOT of Americans that are dumb enough to think fossil fuels really ARE made from dinosaur fossils.
@WilliamT.E.S
@WilliamT.E.S 3 ай бұрын
Congratulations on winning at life Mr Whistler.
@EATSLEEPDRIVE2002
@EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 2 ай бұрын
1:17 for a second I thought he said Akimov, and was like ..."they really named a ship that after Chernobyl."
@DanielWhalen-m8w
@DanielWhalen-m8w 3 ай бұрын
The Baltimore Harbor Lighthouse was powered by Strontium-90 at one time.
@hearingthesmells2500
@hearingthesmells2500 3 ай бұрын
The cut from the first ever mr bean, made my day
@MisterOcclusion
@MisterOcclusion 3 ай бұрын
I watched another KZbin video on the RTG issue claiming there were thousands in use in more than just the lighthouses and were still many out there to this day. There’s even a video of a team training to recover the exposed core of one that was found by some woodcutters, who used it to keep warm, and showed the retrieval of the core. Long tools, hazmat suits, a foreman with a stopwatch to limit exposure time, and a thick lead lined containment vessel on a truck. Quite the undertaking. Sorry - no links. This was many months ago
@bmstylee
@bmstylee 3 ай бұрын
That would be the Lia nuclear incident.
@micha_el_
@micha_el_ 3 ай бұрын
It was indeed the Lia incident, and if it is a radiological/nuclear incident the first channel that comes to mind is plainly difficult
@WouldntULikeToKnow.
@WouldntULikeToKnow. 3 ай бұрын
​@@micha_el_ I second the Plainly Difficult channel. One of the top on youtube!
@goosenotmaverick1156
@goosenotmaverick1156 3 ай бұрын
​@@WouldntULikeToKnow. PD is great, I thought this comment was talking about that video
@thirdwheel1985au
@thirdwheel1985au 2 ай бұрын
​@@micha_el_ Kyle Hill also has a video about this as part of his Half Life Histories series
@UserName-q4i5d
@UserName-q4i5d 2 ай бұрын
I think the problem with nuclear cars is not with the traffic collisions but with someone taking out the fuel and making a dirty bomb. The Mars rover is essentially a nuclear car.
@NinoJoel
@NinoJoel 2 ай бұрын
You gravely underestimate the the average car driver
@Sujamma_Enjoyer
@Sujamma_Enjoyer 20 күн бұрын
⁠@@NinoJoelit really wouldn’t be a big deal for crashes
@NinoJoel
@NinoJoel 20 күн бұрын
@@Sujamma_Enjoyer and wy is that? Even EVs are a problem on crashes. Having radioactive material on a car is just a really bad Idear
@Sujamma_Enjoyer
@Sujamma_Enjoyer 20 күн бұрын
@ well why do you think that radioactive material is worse or the same as an electric car? With EVs they contain lithium that likes to explode into a fire ball that cannot easily be put out with water With a car using a nuclear source the only issue would be recovering the radioactive material There’s no big fireball or explosion that comes from gasoline burning or a lithium battery explosion just radioactive material that has to be collected
@NinoJoel
@NinoJoel 20 күн бұрын
@@Sujamma_Enjoyer I was using EVs as negative example since they contaminate large areas when burning. As for cars with radioactive material I think it would be a bad Idear since the material can contaminate large areas if the car gets exposed to a large accident or in the event of the car burning. Or it being strapped improperly and I could go on for hours wy it's a bad Idear.
@brs690
@brs690 3 ай бұрын
I'm sure there's probably a couple light house cores around but at least the vast majority have been cleaned up.
@josephdanderson5492
@josephdanderson5492 3 ай бұрын
I bet that Huel crap tastes like it's nuclear powered! Lol
@craigsteele101
@craigsteele101 3 ай бұрын
It does You can buy it in Tesco (UK)
@MrWyzdum
@MrWyzdum 2 ай бұрын
It's not just the taste, the texture...🤮
@theslats
@theslats 2 ай бұрын
It was cool to see a glimpse of the "airplane" reactor at EBR1 in Idaho. I used to work next door on another project. You are highly unlikely to be in the area, but if you are, definitely visit. There is so much crazy history there to see.
@kennethwers
@kennethwers Ай бұрын
The road less traveled.
@darraghtate440
@darraghtate440 3 ай бұрын
Somehow, I was talking about nuclear battery powered Soviet lighthouses 20 minutes vefore this was uploaded. Thanks, Kyle Hill
@raymondmartin6737
@raymondmartin6737 3 ай бұрын
Some nuclear powered ideas bombed .😅
@christonamtb4089
@christonamtb4089 3 ай бұрын
Like that joke
@williamwenrich3288
@williamwenrich3288 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear batteries are used in spacecraft. Think nuclear electric. Batteries are still crude and not as good as we need.
@soundspark
@soundspark 2 ай бұрын
They are basically self-heating thermopile batteries. They provide a constant, low wattage.
@williamcampbell9859
@williamcampbell9859 2 ай бұрын
Yeah... they are not often "batteries" , and "nuclear electric" is almost meaningless. Most existing applications of nuclear power create electrical energy through the seebeck effect, or through heating of water to steam. Alpha/Betavoltaics are closest to "nuclear batteries" and work similarly to solar cells, but are not in use in spacecraft as often as RTGs.
@nightlight0x07cc
@nightlight0x07cc 27 күн бұрын
Imagine finding a dead body that is permanently warm because the pacemaker is still radiothermally generating energy and conducting the heat outward xD
@Pan_Blazej
@Pan_Blazej 2 күн бұрын
This is a good video to watch for people who are super hyped about new types of energy & how this time they will fix everything.
@raymondmartin6737
@raymondmartin6737 3 ай бұрын
I am over 80, well past my half life. 😅
@WouldntULikeToKnow.
@WouldntULikeToKnow. 3 ай бұрын
Ha! Good one! 😂
@soundspark
@soundspark 2 ай бұрын
You're past the US life expectancy.
@PAIP_Studio
@PAIP_Studio 2 ай бұрын
Well. Unless you live until you are 160 or more. Some of the new technology I have been reading about might make that possible.
@HandleyR
@HandleyR 2 ай бұрын
Don’t forget the NV Savannah. The first nuclear powered merchant ship.
@thinwaifer
@thinwaifer Ай бұрын
My grandfather had a nuclear pacemaker! I'm not sure when it was implanted - it was removed in the early 2000s and replaced with a lithium ion one, but they had a guy on standby to collect the old one to take it for disposal.
@TheWombat2012
@TheWombat2012 3 ай бұрын
7:48 with cars, I remember a science article back in the eighties saying a pencil sized piece of thorium, in a sealed lead housing and electrical generator, it would power an electric car for a decade.
@raymondmartin6737
@raymondmartin6737 3 ай бұрын
An Icebreaker is a nice party drink. 😅
@amandarhodes4072
@amandarhodes4072 Ай бұрын
Interesting fact. The Kirov class guided missile cruiser remains the only nuclear powered cruiser in service around the world. However the ship's reactor is not powerful enough to run the ship all on it's own. The ship still needs to use it's conventional diesel engines to run together with the reactor to produce the required power to get the ship up to top cruising speed otherwise it's limited to only about 15 knots and can't use any of the high powered radar and missile countermeasures on board.
@charlesmurphy5644
@charlesmurphy5644 2 ай бұрын
20:03 They were decommissioning them until Putin got a little greedy and wanted to take Ukrainian territory!😿
@sypoth
@sypoth 20 күн бұрын
I'm pretty sure that the Nuclear powered pace maker is still a thing, but instead of using thermal energy it instead uses a diamond based nuclear battery that directly converts the radiated particles into electricity.
@stephenhill1716
@stephenhill1716 2 ай бұрын
I normally skip ads, but happened to be talking to my son and looked back when he took a sip and I don’t think he liked that at ALL lol
@Lucian00311
@Lucian00311 2 ай бұрын
Implanting lithium powered pacemakers in the human body? We are made of 60% water , and lithium is known to go BOOM when it touches water. Who comes up with these things? Doctor Doofenshmirtz ?
@bringmeblueskies
@bringmeblueskies 2 ай бұрын
Nuclear Powered packed lunch
@jorgebatista6323
@jorgebatista6323 27 күн бұрын
We do have nuclear-powered cars nowadays though, the only difference being that the nuclear reactor is on a power plant somewhere, connected to the charger 😅
@andymouse
@andymouse 3 ай бұрын
Retractable reels will never catch on.
@BabyMakR
@BabyMakR 3 ай бұрын
They have them on trucks all over the place.
@grilnam9945
@grilnam9945 2 ай бұрын
@@BabyMakRhe said Reels
@georgedobinson6152
@georgedobinson6152 2 ай бұрын
The Chrysler TV8 sounded mad. A modular tank that was amphibious, around half the weight of current tanks, and able to be powered by either a v8 or a mini nuclear reactor.
@Prestiged_peck
@Prestiged_peck 2 ай бұрын
I think the niclear powered bomber missed a huge potential option, set it up as a hybrid, use the reactor to power it while on patrol and loitering, then fire up jet and piston engines for an extra kick when it comes time to deliver the payload, then once youre near the target, start a meltdown/bomb conversion and jettison the reactor as the payload, and then return home on combustion power alone assumimg you get far enough away before she blows. You would likely also need to use the combustion engines to get off the ground, so the nuclear power would be purely for supplemental power and loitering capability.
@eddieb1323
@eddieb1323 Ай бұрын
NS Savannah was the first nuclear-powered merchant ship. Launched on July 21, 1959 and deactivated in 1971.
@christopherleubner6633
@christopherleubner6633 2 ай бұрын
The nuclear battery in a pacemaker is an itty bitty RTG, its about the diameter of a TO5 transistor and 3 times as long. The pltonium is a pressed oxide pellet in a welded titanium container wth one side brazed to a copper heat spreader. This is attached to a thermoelectric device then mounted on the lower copper heat sink. The power it makes in electricity is in the miliwatt range. Has 5 curies per serving of plutonium 238.❤
@laughingachilles
@laughingachilles 2 ай бұрын
Nuclear reactors for Icebreakers makes an incredible amount of sense. Yes it's possible this goes bad, but modern designs in those circumstances can make those things almost impossible and provide complete containment if something goes wrong. Seriously. We should have more nuclear icebreakers.
@soundspark
@soundspark 2 ай бұрын
Giant ships can have nuclear power because it is big enough the reactor can have sufficient shielding to protect passengers without making the weight excessive. Nuclear batteries are safe because they are powered by an alpha emitter, for which shielding is easy.
@laughingachilles
@laughingachilles 2 ай бұрын
@@soundspark Yeah I am fully onboard with nuclear ships. I'm also happy with nuclear batteries.
@bronsonballard66
@bronsonballard66 2 ай бұрын
The US also had a nuclear powered lighthouse in the Chesapeake Bay, granted if I remember correctly, it was only for a couple years before switching to a different power source.
@DadalorianCreates
@DadalorianCreates 2 ай бұрын
"Of the late black and white years." --- i was taking a drink and choked... once again point to the basement
@martythemartian99
@martythemartian99 2 ай бұрын
Clean and abundant, yeah but never cheap. Pricing was based on the low cost of the fuel for running the reactor, without including construction, maintenance, and decommissioning, which would run into the billions.
@williamgreen5575
@williamgreen5575 2 ай бұрын
The RTGs you mentioned that are left or abandoned were not for light houses. They were for cold War listening stations and weather stations.
@Natomon01
@Natomon01 2 ай бұрын
The world's first nuclear-powered surface warship was the a USS Longbeach (CGN-9); not the Enterprise as many believe. She was followed by others like her, but the concept has fallen out of favor because it's very difficult and costly to refuel them. It basically involves a complete disassembly of the deck and superstructure.
@ggardner1138
@ggardner1138 2 ай бұрын
I love that you referenced the Russian ship the Lenin as "she", as well as all ships should be referenced.
@marsaustralis6881
@marsaustralis6881 2 ай бұрын
Personally, the world should revisit using plutonium power sources for low-power implants. Pacemakers, monitoring devices for insulin or other conditions, and even neural stimulation systems (the experimental stuff used to treat drug-resistant depression by regularly pulsing the part of the brain responsible for happiness). They've been proven safe, economically cheaper, and reliable, and don't require complex means of recharging the batteries. Then scale it out via a variant in nuclear batteries, where the nuclear material is safely stored within the molecular matrix, and can slowly recharge a battery to some extent, further extending the lifespan of said devices.
@Inflammate
@Inflammate 2 ай бұрын
Its pretty smart to use them in cold climates, good thermo electric couple would work like a dream for producig energy
@dodgydruid
@dodgydruid 2 ай бұрын
Aw being one of them mad buggers who actually owns a Reliant 3 wheel van, always heartening to see the old Regal van from Mr Bean :)
@charlesgantz5865
@charlesgantz5865 2 ай бұрын
In Idaho, at the Idaho National Lab, you can find the Experimental Breeder Reactor I (EBR-1) National Historic Landmark. In the parking lot there are two of the reactors developed for the bombers. This is just down the road from the SL-1 reactor, the one that had one of its operators impaled on the ceiling. You can go to visit next time you are in southern Idaho. Very interesting place. I visited there when I went to Nuclear Power School.
@StephenMcGregor1986
@StephenMcGregor1986 2 ай бұрын
There's like 2 nuclear pacemakers left I believe
@flyboy152
@flyboy152 3 ай бұрын
Plutonium is, and was, fairly expensive. Pacemakers using it would seem to be cost-prohibitive. 🤔
@WouldntULikeToKnow.
@WouldntULikeToKnow. 3 ай бұрын
The rich could pay for it. Not that we want them to live longer though...
@christopherleubner6633
@christopherleubner6633 2 ай бұрын
Yup especially the 238 variety. It has to be special made rather than extracted from fuel. The bomb stuff is 239 isotope and you would need lots of it to make a RTG from it. A two kg chunk is about as warm as a coffee mug while 2kg of 238 would be brightly yellow 🔥
@djpywell
@djpywell 29 күн бұрын
@@WouldntULikeToKnow.why wouldn’t you want a rich person to live a little longer?
@Crystal_Blue_Persuasion
@Crystal_Blue_Persuasion 3 ай бұрын
Great reporting Simon!
@mormornie
@mormornie 2 ай бұрын
I love the nuclear car concepts, they definitely scratch my atompunk retrofuturism itch
@gc7820
@gc7820 2 ай бұрын
Ford nucleon: and you thought the pinto blew up spectacularly when it got rear-ended
@44R0Ndin
@44R0Ndin 2 ай бұрын
Chapter 6 could easily have been Rockets, with a look into project NERVA (Nuclear Engine for Rocket Vehicle Applications). Works about the same as a nuclear power plant in concept, just trade out the Water for Liquid Hydrogen, and instead of spinning a turbine to generate electricity, you instead force the hot (now gaseous) Hydrogen thru a conventional De-Laval profile bell-shaped rocket nozzle. Specific impulse is around 800-900 seconds in a vacuum, when even the Space Shuttle Main Engines can only manage like 460ish in the same conditions. Most probable application for such a nuclear rocket engine was a replacement for the J-2 engine in the S-IVB third stage of the Saturn-V moon rocket, to allow mostly the same rocket to push projected missions to Mars (only other major modification to the S-IVB being a change from separate LH2 and LOX tanks to a single, larger LH2 tank). We even did long-duration firing tests of hardware that was pretty much flight-ready, it was THAT close to being implemented. And then NASA's budget got cut post-Apollo, and we had to shelve the whole idea. NERVA would have used highly enriched ("weapons grade") Uranium as the reactor fuel, and so it was actually quite lightweight, aside from the need for a radiation shield for the habitable sections of any vehicle propelled by such an engine. Only recently have plans to use a similar engine resurfaced and actually gotten funding, with new plans from NASA being to use Low-Enriched ("Reactor-grade") uranium as the fuel this time, which makes the engine heavier, but still has good performance. Electric Boat Works (the people who design the reactors for the US nuclear submarine fleet) are the contractors for the reactor portion of this new engine, Blue Origin is the contractor for the "rocket stage as a whole", and DARPA is the agency managing it. Super interesting, and maybe we'll see a Mars mission with people in it within my lifetime after all, after I gave up on those dreams when the Constellation program was canceled by Obama.
@network_king
@network_king 2 ай бұрын
I think they should use this more in like trains, large cargo ships, cruise ships, etc.
@seishino
@seishino 2 ай бұрын
If a vehicle is already carrying nuclear bombs, does adding a nuclear power supply really increase the risk from a crash?
@dannymoneywell
@dannymoneywell Ай бұрын
We should make nuclear cars with heavily shielded reactors, i mean, it's 2025, c'mon!
@DanielChaves1984
@DanielChaves1984 3 ай бұрын
Crude oil never came from dinosaurs
@junkx3699
@junkx3699 3 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@osumbuckeyenut
@osumbuckeyenut 3 ай бұрын
Correct, its called Crude Oil😎
@CAROLDDISCOVER-2025
@CAROLDDISCOVER-2025 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing that out 👍
@dustinainsley8792
@dustinainsley8792 3 ай бұрын
Yep. We not going to run out of oil.
@WouldntULikeToKnow.
@WouldntULikeToKnow. 3 ай бұрын
It was a joke
@murrayscott9546
@murrayscott9546 3 ай бұрын
Scary , Bpo ! Just in time for Halloween !
@morsumbra9692
@morsumbra9692 2 ай бұрын
Nuclear batteries are coming back!!! Cant wait for these things.
@sheilaolfieway1885
@sheilaolfieway1885 26 күн бұрын
nuclear powered ice breakers 1. hot 2.powerful 3.don't need refueling very often.... aside from screwing it up, how can you ask for more?
@AndreBazenga
@AndreBazenga 2 ай бұрын
Its always a treat hear about orphaned soviet nuclear reactors.
@juslitor
@juslitor 2 ай бұрын
Not the radiant future they were thought to herald.
@hibob841
@hibob841 2 ай бұрын
It's hard for me to imagine that a nuclear-powered personal car was ever taken seriously by engineers as a thing they could build...right? I'm only an armchair-everything, but by my reckoning the smallest thing we've ever made nuclear-powered (not counting RTG's here), is an attack submarine. Those are somewhat larger than a car, and have the benefit of easy access to basically infinite cooling. I believe the smallest functional reactors IRL would _maybe_ fit into a semi trailer, but assuming you could miniaturize down to trunk-sized...How are you going to cool it? Isn't it going to suck to haul many, many tons of shielding around? Isn't it going to really suck that every car accident involving one is a potential radiological incident? People _can't_ have genuinely thought this would be a thing, right? They may as well have said "we'll use magic".
@gummiente3622
@gummiente3622 2 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's a point i have thought about too. Maybe they would have needed to refill cooling water every now and then...
@iwikal
@iwikal 2 ай бұрын
Not to mention operating it safely would have required much more skill and expertise than you could expect from your average driver. Starting your car would no longer be a simple matter of turning the ignition. Especially in an era before computers were a thing you could feasibly put in a car.
@jliller
@jliller 2 ай бұрын
Having to swap out your nuclear reactor just as often as you would change your oil is a buzzkill.
@pittyman
@pittyman 3 ай бұрын
0:30 And why I suppose to want an "nuclear watch" when my Casio works 10+ years on one button battery? 😎
@juslitor
@juslitor 2 ай бұрын
or a solar one, which potentially can go even longer before the rechargeable gives up its ghost.
@scottthomas3792
@scottthomas3792 2 ай бұрын
​@@juslitor I have a solar watch... it's solar/capacitor...no batteries at all. Even in darkness, the capacitor, once charged, runs it for a week or so.
@chavdarnaidenov2661
@chavdarnaidenov2661 2 ай бұрын
Nuclear is perfect for icebreakers, military submarines, remote mines and production facilities, deep space probes,and lighthouses if they are remote and ultimatic. So there's nothing weird here, except the accent.
@jdfriar
@jdfriar 3 ай бұрын
it wouldnt be hard to make an alpha generator electric car. look up the nuclear boy scout. then look up alpha wave generator. it wouldn't be able to be fast or large, but it would be relatively safe, and an alpha battery lasts about 400 years. requires no charging. f big oil.
@JustMe-dc6ks
@JustMe-dc6ks 2 ай бұрын
RTG’s are not reactors at all. There’s no fission chain reaction going on in those, just ordinary radioactive decay.
@jasonsimons4411
@jasonsimons4411 2 ай бұрын
Ford pinto: gets rear ended and bursts into flame Ford nucleon: hold my beer..
@dreddfan01
@dreddfan01 3 ай бұрын
No sign of simons nuclear explosion scream from brain blaze? Im disappointed 😁 Great video as usual 👍
@lbochtler
@lbochtler 2 ай бұрын
There is also the NS Savanah, a nuclear powered merchant ship. It was a magnificent ship.
@CheyzBervik
@CheyzBervik Ай бұрын
Tony Soprano called, he wants his shirt back, capiche??
@jamesjdog
@jamesjdog 2 ай бұрын
The idea of a - Nuclear Powered tractor; intrigues and terrifies me 😂
@christopherleubner6633
@christopherleubner6633 2 ай бұрын
The Russians actually built them using nuclear waste stuff to power a steam engine. 🤔 😮
@loopymind
@loopymind 2 ай бұрын
Hahaha that Huel ad... When you took a swig of the bottle, it didn't really instil a sense of it tasting good 😅
@virgojoe72
@virgojoe72 2 ай бұрын
"American's threw out the idea about the direct cycle system" "these ideas never left the drawing board" Look up Project Pluto!!! A nuclear powered ICBM that would have left a trail or irradiated particles wherever it went, and got so far in development that they built and tested working prototype engine with zero failures during testing. There is a video here on KZbin about it.
@TheDaniel366Cobra
@TheDaniel366Cobra 2 ай бұрын
Collecting plutonium from pacemakers to use for some nefarious purpose sounds incredibly stupid. Imagine tracking all the people still having one, somehow collecting the pacemaker, extracting the plutonium and still not having enough to build even a model of a nuclear bomb. And there are much easier ways to poison someone if anyone thinks of that. The ability to last the whole patient's life is crazy though. Imagine not having to have surgery every 10 years for a battery replacement.
@soundspark
@soundspark 2 ай бұрын
It's not even the same isotope so one couldn't even make a bomb out of it.
@christopherleubner6633
@christopherleubner6633 2 ай бұрын
It's 250mg or so. Also not nuclear bomb material.
@soundspark
@soundspark 2 ай бұрын
@christopherleubner6633 Nuclear bomb material isn't self-heating at subcritical mass. Plutonium-238 is non-fissile, and any significant mass gets hot from highly active alpha decay.
@andyevans2336
@andyevans2336 2 ай бұрын
Think 'dirty bomb' yeah, that's nefarious indeed.
@totherarf
@totherarf 3 ай бұрын
The Atomic plane was never meant to fly! It was designed by the same guy at Oak Ridge who made the first Salt Reactor. He knew it was not going to work as a plane but the military were handy in throwing cash at them to research their other reactors. Check out videos by Kirk Sorrenson for better information!
@PMA65537
@PMA65537 2 ай бұрын
Someone approached Feynman to say reactor + plane is a new invention; sign this patent application. Apparently the patent office is sloppy enough to accept this without seeing a nuclear powered plane actually invented.
@mistermonkey5842
@mistermonkey5842 2 ай бұрын
​@PMA65537 the patent is for a new or novel process, nothing says it needs to work, rather that it merely "might" work.
@Bramon83
@Bramon83 2 ай бұрын
told my buddy about these lighthouses and he started getting wild eyed the other day.... told him to calm down most are totally gone and the rest are decommissioned or at end of life
@thezood
@thezood 2 ай бұрын
Laughed out because I was drinking a huel black while watching this.
@DeadPollo
@DeadPollo 2 ай бұрын
I want a Nuclear Powered Stream Deck
@h-leath6339
@h-leath6339 2 ай бұрын
And also, I had quite a bit of fun with my Geiger counter after an angiogram. Unfortunately it only gave me the ability to make my meter sing. I was not able to shoot lightning bolts from my hands. Apparently only casino carpets in winter grant me that power...
@keryeeastin4022
@keryeeastin4022 3 ай бұрын
Nuclear powered Siomon
@donaldcarey114
@donaldcarey114 2 ай бұрын
A nuclear ship left out was the NS Savannah, the first nuclear-powered merchant ship.
@bobsinhav
@bobsinhav 2 ай бұрын
Nuclear makes sense for ships and aircrafts
@Barry-dy3mn
@Barry-dy3mn 2 ай бұрын
Fact boy, your intellectual content is brilliant! I would enjoy and warch you more is you coud have the editor figure out how to get rid of the pop and hiss
@ns219000
@ns219000 3 ай бұрын
Having a small nuclear powered steam plant in my chest is a retirement goal.
@JackNelson-p4p
@JackNelson-p4p Ай бұрын
My uncle had a nuclear pacemaker installed in 1973 it never failed, was removed upon his death in the 1980s.
@jacobcasmus1882
@jacobcasmus1882 Ай бұрын
Why don't we have crazy looking future cars like they were doing in the 50s?? With a big plexiglass dome and what not... Those would be Awesome!!! Maybe I'll make some or try and sell Tesla on them! Lol
@LegaRoSS
@LegaRoSS 2 ай бұрын
Should have added examples with nuclear-powered sattelites like the 'Legenda' sattelite group of naval intelligence and targeting system.
@miroslavzima8856
@miroslavzima8856 19 күн бұрын
Well, at least we wouldn't be worried about late night piss- no need to use light.
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