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Anybody else done this? Want to go off grid. Was gonna ring up EDF but thought i'd try on here first.
Looked at wind turbines, solar panels and some other green energy arty farty stuff but in the end came down on the Nuke side after contemplating it over a pint or two.
Ok, its gonna cost an arm & a leg initially to build but I thought to offset some of the cost i'll go down the crowd funding route with the promise to sell investors cheap lecky when its built. Neighbours don't seem to Impressed, citing the time I melted my conservatory burning some garden rubbish but as I said, shit happens...
Any thoughts?
Phone up the MOD and ask if you can buy the reactor from one of the old nuke subs. Should fit fairly nicely and give more than enough power.
Have a read about the [url= http://www.dangerouslaboratories.org/radscout.html ]radioactive boy scout[/url]
Write to a few people - tell them you're doing a 'science project' - gather your materials - place an atom in a vice and split it with a cold chisel.
Quickly finish up the research in Cold Fusion and bobs yur uncle
There was one in the 'For Sale' classifieds the other week. They only wanted £1. It was buyer collects tho, and my trailer has a puncture.
I can't see why not. Can I buy into the project before other investors find out about it please . . . .
Count me in on the Crowd Funding. It seems like a completely sound idea and I can foresee no issues with it whatsoever. Your neighbours sound like a bunch of snowflakes. Even if things do go wrong, what's the worst that can happen? Developing super powers that's what.
Start [url= https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Pile-1 ]Here[/url]
seems pretty straight forward, I think most of those named died of some form of cancer in later life, so don't forget the lead lined underpants.
🙂 you may laugh! When we started up our local sustainable energy group we had a young lad come along who was convinced he was on the verge of getting his home-made hydrolysis power plant up and running in his garage. Never saw him again and don't recall any large hydrogen fueled fires on the estate so presume he is still trying (or it works fine!)
As long as 52% of the hard working British public say it's OK , crack on.
Of course you won't actually ask them if they want a nuclear power station in a neighbour's garden but if they like ice cream.
Wouldn't bother with a self-build, sure it might be cheaper materials wise, (wouldn't need to bother with any of them fancy super-alloys, jut some melted down teaspoons) and labour costs, but the regulator hurdles would be a PITA.
Just [url= https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/24/mini_nuclear_reactors_for_british_power/ ]buy one off the shelf[/url], and wire it in after the electricity meter. 300Mw should be sufficient to run the meter backwards, and the heat from the red hot wiring should mean you'd not need to turn on the central heating either.
Some lads in Swansea uni engineering department have knocked together a hydroliser. Seems to work / hasn't exploded yet.
place an atom in a vice and split it with a cold chisel.
Give it a couple of light back strokes with a hacksaw first, otherwise it won't split cleanly.
Colin Furze has probably built one in his back garden already so be sure to check out his how to videos on YouTube.
New genre of renewable energy comedy
Anybody else done this?
Nuclear power aside there are a few examples of micro generation about - smaller generators closer to communities so you benefit from less get loss in transmission and benefit from the heat that would otherwise be lost.
One classic example is the old BBC Studios - they had their own power plant for the studio lights and piped the excess heat out to neighbouring homes.
I live close to an old mill town and the trust that adopted the land the mill used to stand on have. Every trace above ground of the mill has gone but the they found that the underground lades and the old 1950s water turbines that powered the mill are still present and intact - they're getting ready to re-commision them and they're expected to generate £100k a year in feed in tarrif that will fund community projects.
My house and my neighbours are all on a district heating system powered by a big wood burning boiler out the back. Reading this makes me wonder if you could use the heat to generate a bit of electric as well. There is a weir and old turbine house out the front - the 'big house' was an early adopter of this elektrickery back in the day but the actual turbine is gone. The turbine is only the icing on the cake though as theres 20 miles of flow management running upstream of that weir thats still in place.
Not the boy scout but another madman in America.
I present Doug Coulter.
[url=
plant basement[/url]
You might be able to get some bankrupt stock at a good price
http://www.power-technology.com/comment/commentwestinghouse-bankruptcy-and-its-implications-for-the-nuclear-power-market-5826267/
Thanks for the support Lads, I'm stoked. From what I can see this is gonna be a lot easier than I thought.
Mint.
It was nice knowing you.
so don't forget the lead lined underpants.
Otherwise Chernobyl Fallout.
I'm all for it but why your own back garden. Surely you can find a poorer neighbour whose garden would suit?
Little sweetener in a brown envelope should cover it
maccruiskeen, here all week ladies and gentlemen.Chernobyl Fallout.
racist!...brown envelope...
Flashinthepan.
1. I've got the space for another shed in the garden, so housing it int a problem.
2.My hose pipe won't reach into any of the neighbours gardens and i believe i'll need it for cooling.
3.Also I'd have to buy another extension lead to get the electric back home. Costs are mounting...
Have you considered what you're going to do with the spent fuel? If you do that then you'll be ahead of every previous owner of a nuclear power plant.
Spent fuel? i hear councils have recycling targets....
Blue bin?
Green you dafty.
[url= https://video.vice.com/en_us/video/outsiders-doug-coulter/55afd234091d63551dfee805 ]The man who built a fusion reactor in his basement[/url]
Here you go OP, give this chap a call for some tips
Green you dafty.
Closer to the truth than you'd think!
A lot of schools have (or had) various radioactive materials in their science departments - stuff that emits alpha and gamma radiation and so on so that you can demonstrate with a geiger counter what materials the various types or radiation can and can't pass through.
Its fallen out of fashion a recent years, especially the more potent radio active material - so the official advice to schools wishing to dispose of it all is.... throw it in the bin. If there was any coordinated attempt to deal with it all this little bits nuclear material would end up in one place adding up to a lot. Instead it was conceder better to have it randomly scattered in every refuse facility 🙂
Make sure you get the slow release nuclear materials, not the fast stuff....
22hrs since the last activity on this thread. Anyone seen markrh today? And wasn't that a pretty sunset today, with some unusual cloud formations?
He'll be along shortly no doubt 'quoting from the sanskrit'
Still here! Bit of a u turn on the old Nuke station. Got a bit of a bad back at the moment so diy is off the menu and no money for contractors. Plus a cat has had kittens under a neighbours shed....
Plus a cat has had kittens under a neighbours shed...
Well, if they start sprouting wings and going after the birds while in flight, then you'll have a handy indicator of something being amiss, kinda like a canary in a coal mine.
But not yellow...
But just think of the YouTube kitten videos!
This is almost as good as my idea to remove the ground floor of my house. Support the upper floors on a RSJ ring beam, so I can have a sufficient sized pump track connecting the front and back gardens, where the ground floor used to be. Oh and bike storage in the bedrooms, proper Job like 8)
I hate seeing a building like that getting trashed...
then you'll have a handy indicator of something being amiss,
I think someone is already way ahead of you - [url= http://www.theraycatsolution.com/#10000 ]Ray Cats[/url]
Facinating idea actually: The half-life of some of the radio active waste we are burying is longer than 'Behaviouraly modern humans' i.e. longer than any evidence we have of any sort of language or culture and probably 10 times longer than even the oldest languages still spoken today. So what language do you write the warning signs in if you want someone to still be able to read and understand them in 10,000 or 20,000 years time?
"Totes radioactives. Soz. Lol"
^Don't worry, the mutants will keep them away...
Don't forget to hire your own anti-nuke protesters to undermine and infiltrate the genuine lot, works far better if they're engaged from the outset.
Have you checked that you can put the waste in your wheelie bin with your local council?


