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#41
Yum. Crob is here, tellin people they're idiots!
Free "The GOD DAMN RANT Thread"!
#42
In terms of infrastructure? Utilities, Road Building, Communications....not much. Fiber cable is put in the ground the same way copper was. Building construction is different, sure, we put more stuff on absorbent systems for the shaking, and buildings are a bit different...
but: Concrete, Steel, Rock, Asphalt, Plastics. That's what we use. My equipment is stronger, more efficient, and cleaner, but we still build stuff in mostly the same way.
What's significantly different, oh wise one...do tell.
#44
The west coast has benefited, engineering wise, from the LA earthquakes. The 5.4 in 08 barely did a thing.
there was just a 4.5 200 mi SE of Sacramento yesterday.... NBD
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The refinery, which processes about 245,000 barrels of oil a day, is the second-largest facility in the state. Chevron initially reported a fire at the facility late Monday. Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service said wholesale gasoline prices are up as much as 31 cents in the San Francisco Bay area and as much as 26 cents a gallon in Los Angeles. "All of these increases have occurred today and it puts $4 a gallon retail gasoline back in play for a large portion of the state," he said.
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#48
#49
fireballs no, but I imagine this sucked for a more than a few people in the modern era since they weren't exactly driving horse and buggies...
that and considering the refinery was operational 110 years ago last month refining 10,000 barrels a day in 1902 my guess it has seen it's fair share of earthquakes over the intervening years.
Last edited by valfaw; 08-07-2012 at 12:45 PM.
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Demokratikally Elekted Fist Lieutenant of the Outside Cavalry of the Independent People's Republik of Offtopikstan
Has anyone seen my sonic screwdriver?
#56
I'll make it easy, this is the first thing that came up:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_era
I didn't see anything about a change in oil refinery building codes in the last 30 days covered in that entry but I might have missed it, I skimmed it pretty quickly.
Only for entertainment value am I laughing at this. Otherwise, are you serious?
See that link above, it's included in one of the Modern Era definitions that I found, in fact I think that's considered Contemporary.
Actually I think you're the one that brought up the modern era and infrastructure.
Quite living in the past, we're talking about modern here...
My mom drove across both of those the morning before the earthquake...
Thanks for digging up the history of the refinery, that was going to be my next stop. If only there had been a major earthquake in the last 110 years then we'd be able to actually test the capabilities of the refinery, none of theis 6.9 pansy stuff.
Lately I have been testing "tip-in events". Just the tip-in. Just to see how it feels. Response time is typically on the order of 2-3 seconds. Sometimes the injection timing is a little off...
#58
if that is true then it survived the big 1906 one. current retrofit engineering would make it even more stable in an earthquake.
also from what I got from news reports Fukushima failed not because of the earthquake. It failed due to the fact that it wasn't built correctly for the size of a possible tsunami. The reactors automatically shut off when the earthquake hit. so to power it the offsite power source was supposed to maintain power. that failed, so generators in the basement kicked on... the basement flooded, killed those... no cooling... melt down.
#59
Demokratikally Elekted Fist Lieutenant of the Outside Cavalry of the Independent People's Republik of Offtopikstan
Has anyone seen my sonic screwdriver?
#61
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Mostly the latter. Without knowing exactly what went up it's hard to say. Going with it being more of a fuel upgrading thing it's soot/unburned hydrocarbons, water and CO2 and some nitrogen compounds. Basically very thick exhaust.
Toward the worse end of the scale there's a lot of sulfur and some metal content...so thick exhaust from the 1950s.
If this were a specialty chemicals/polymers/fertilizer operation those unburned hydrocarbons could be very dangerous, but I think that's not the case.
Last edited by Robstr; 08-07-2012 at 01:07 PM.
All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others.
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Free "The GOD DAMN RANT Thread"!
#67
ussr falling (i was there btw), burma, etc. have ZERO to do with building codes.
just because the refinery is 110 years old, doesn't mean the structures are 110 years old (probably more like 40).
As far as the "evidence" (that it's burning) that doesn't make it more or less earthquake-proof. Fire is fire. You don't need an earthquake for a fire.
Demokratikally Elekted Fist Lieutenant of the Outside Cavalry of the Independent People's Republik of Offtopikstan
Has anyone seen my sonic screwdriver?
#68
Demokratikally Elekted Fist Lieutenant of the Outside Cavalry of the Independent People's Republik of Offtopikstan
Has anyone seen my sonic screwdriver?
#69
Countries failed or changed names, the economy cycled, some economic stats are now out of date...big deal. What do any of those have to do with energy infrastructure or construction in the US?
Obviously a 100 year old refinery is not infallible as was proven yesterday. Seeing how this refinery has held up to a major failure is a good indicator of what might happen in another major earthquake. Another good indicator would be how it held up to other major earthquakes, 1989 and 1906. I'm sure there have been more than a couple of updates since then too.
You're point is getting rather dull.
Lately I have been testing "tip-in events". Just the tip-in. Just to see how it feels. Response time is typically on the order of 2-3 seconds. Sometimes the injection timing is a little off...