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Frantic search for radioactive material missing from power plant in Thailand


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13 hours ago, Woof999 said:

There are several quite believable reasons that have no connection to human mis-deeds.

 

To name but two:

 

1.) Perhaps the brakes failed on the vehicle the cylinder was stored on and it rolled away.

2.) Perhaps the security guard was having a micro sleep.

 

[/joke]

There was a similar case where radioactive materials actually (the size of your little finger) fell off the back of a lorry that was transporting it across Australia a few weeks ago.  The area of the search was huge, but eventually the search party found it a few meters from the side of the road. ????

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many years ago a small container of Plutonium from Ongarak experimental Nuclear research centre  was lost , it ended up in hands of various scrap dealers who thought it was PLATINUM ,, and a few Bhudda  amulets  and some jewellery  was made from it , some people died and others got sick before authorities recovered it all,, quite funny if you think about it but  not good at all.

 

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16 hours ago, smedly said:

this is pretty serious, how on earth can something like this go missing :omfg:

Not long ago the same scenario happened in WA.

that one caused massive freak outs untill it was found.

Fallen off the back of a truck is  a real thing

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16 hours ago, khunPer said:

The article has the answer...:thumbsup:

 

An expert in the disposal of radioactive materials, Sumetha Wichienpet, said that Caesium-137 was used in checking for invisible cracks in pipelines in the power plant, adding that the radiation emitted from Cesium-137 into the environment does not exceed 7 Rem but, in nature, the amount of radiation should not exceed 1 Rem.

YES!! The first 13 responders to this clearly didn't read the linked article before posting. Just jump to the keyboard.....

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11 hours ago, WHansen said:

The picture does not look like a mobile device (radiation source)used to inspect the integrity of welds to me.

In my industry the equipment is carried to the location of the weld to be inspected and usually there is a 10 meter barrier put in place before "bombing" of the weld is carried out.

xradiographic-testing.jpg.pagespeed.ic.xZn3YD_v0D.webp

Assuming the picture in the OP is the missing container, then it is possible that someone thought it was a redundant bit of rusting junk, unbolted it and is hopefully using it as a door stop or wheel chock rather than selling it for scrap where the danger of it being cut open is very real. Maybe their own maintenance team removed it as the OP picture indicates that it was about to fall off?

 

Here's another picture of the missing item that was probably taken years earlier before corrosion took over.

 

137.jpg.5f327bc5cbd3071d6f6bd9029952e25b.jpg

Photo by Green Network Facebook page

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17 hours ago, aussienam said:

 

 

Side note: Please get rid of that annoying new video ad pop-up. It blocks most of the text box on Android screens and makes it impossible to comment.  I close it but it re-appears soon after. I see it isn't an issue on laptop screens. Is a bad tech design whoever implemented it.

It doesn't appear at all on duck-duck go browser.

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3 hours ago, hotchilli said:

Yes, some idiot probably took it for scrap metal not knowing the contents.

Stealing this bloody dangerous "scrap metal" instead of the usual cutting of power lines, steel pipes, rail tracks etc.

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