Back in the day when men were men and shielding was cheap, they flew a reactor in the back of an aircraft live, to test if in principle they could, so they could move to testing propellers driven by electric motor. It took a very heavy aircraft (the B-50)
There have also been reactors in the Arctic and Antarctic bases. Neither of which were capable of being done as a full spec sealed concrete containment.
What's novel here, is bringing mobile reactors into the modern age, not the mobility per se.
It will become politicised very quickly once the Murdoch press decides it's worth it, because SMR are a hot topic (sorry) in Australia, as the Oil and Mining sector rah-rah squad fights back on the push to wind and solar and batteries.
I am always shocked by usage of “back then” and “good old days” and the like. What does it even mean Men were Men. Comparing the past that seemed harder than the hardships of the present day is so one sided and a simpletons way of looking at things. People suffered back then. People suffer today. Rich suffer and poor suffer. Suffering is suffering doesn’t matter the source and if it makes sense or not. You may fall sick eating an apple or eating fish and ce could argue all day long which suffering was more justified but it still dosnt change the nature of suffering a sufferer undergoes. The still feel the suffering despite the source.
Sorry for the digression but just had to make the point about men being men
I don't think this is a new literary device really.
Aristotle: "Young people have exalted notions, because they have not yet been humbled by life or learned its necessary limitations; moreover, their hopeful disposition makes them think themselves equal to great things."
It is possible to read this in "back in my day, when togate were togate" ...
Your point is well made, But I do rather think "simpleton" was uncalled for. It's a common trope. If you struggle with it, then you're struggling with a concept which is not uncommon, in fact is very common. Not all common things are for simpletons only. It makes no sense, more than any literary device does. "I am literally falling off my chair" is said much more than meant, because mostly people are figuratively falling off their chairs. Men are no more or less men now, than they were. The good old days were harsh. It was said as a rhetorical device. It wasn't said to hurt you, or to harm anyone.
> In those days spirits were brave, the stakes were high, men were real men, women were real women and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were real small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri...
Individual happiness in the United States was much higher by most objective measures. In the 1950s, crime was lower, inflation-adjusted income was higher, people got married and had kids.
Are weight and non availability of sea water the main things that keep the nuclear reactors from submarines from meeting the requirements of Project Pele?
The main difference is size. Submarine reactors are typically ~ 200 MW (carrier reactors are 700 MW or more). Pele is looking at ~ 5 MW.
It's analogous to laptop vs desktop computers. The laptop is smaller and dissipates less power. Laptop components aren't exactly shrunken desktop components, but they're fundamentally the same.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 28.4 ms ] threadThere have also been reactors in the Arctic and Antarctic bases. Neither of which were capable of being done as a full spec sealed concrete containment.
What's novel here, is bringing mobile reactors into the modern age, not the mobility per se.
It will become politicised very quickly once the Murdoch press decides it's worth it, because SMR are a hot topic (sorry) in Australia, as the Oil and Mining sector rah-rah squad fights back on the push to wind and solar and batteries.
Sorry for the digression but just had to make the point about men being men
Aristotle: "Young people have exalted notions, because they have not yet been humbled by life or learned its necessary limitations; moreover, their hopeful disposition makes them think themselves equal to great things."
It is possible to read this in "back in my day, when togate were togate" ...
Your point is well made, But I do rather think "simpleton" was uncalled for. It's a common trope. If you struggle with it, then you're struggling with a concept which is not uncommon, in fact is very common. Not all common things are for simpletons only. It makes no sense, more than any literary device does. "I am literally falling off my chair" is said much more than meant, because mostly people are figuratively falling off their chairs. Men are no more or less men now, than they were. The good old days were harsh. It was said as a rhetorical device. It wasn't said to hurt you, or to harm anyone.
> In those days spirits were brave, the stakes were high, men were real men, women were real women and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were real small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri...
It's analogous to laptop vs desktop computers. The laptop is smaller and dissipates less power. Laptop components aren't exactly shrunken desktop components, but they're fundamentally the same.