In a nutshell, Brown’s Ferry fire was started by someone inspecting cable penetration seals in the cable spreading room with a candle or other open flame. If the flame blew, there was a seal leak. Unfortunately the flame was drawn in or made contact with the seal foam and ignited it. Further complications arose when the workers tried to extinguish the fire themselves plus did not notify the control room of the fire. The control room began seeing odd instrument readings (due to the failing cable insulation and subsequent short circuits). The fire brigade was notified but was unsure whether they should douse the cables with water. This progressed for 5 or more hours in which more cables burned. Eventually the offsite fire dept was called and extinguished the fire. This resulted in a whole new method of fire protection, fire modeling and procedures to deal with every possible worst case fire scenario a nuke plant could experience.
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulic Basics - Part 2 - by Curtis Von Fange. In the last entry to this series we gave a brief overview of hydraulic system theory, its basic components and how it works. Now lets take a look at some general maintenance tips that will keep our system operating to its fullest potential. The two biggest enemies to a hydraulic system are dirt and water. Dirt can score the insides of cylinders, spool valves and pumps. Wate
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