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To: greeneyes
I also read that they evacuated a bunch of people and then blew up a dam to hopefully save the 3G dam.

How would blowing up another dam save the 3G dam?

It it is downstream from 3G it would have no effect. If it is upstream it would make things worse.

It would have to be part of the 3G dam system but only have a limited flow. Opening the shipping locks might qualify but that is risky. They might get jammed open.

WWG1WGA

Garde la Foi, mes amis! Nous nous sommes les sauveurs de la République! Maintenant et Toujours!
(Keep the Faith, my friends! We are the saviors of the Republic! Now and Forever!)

LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)

1,243 posted on 07/19/2020 11:35:25 AM PDT by LonePalm (Commander and Chef)
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To: LonePalm

It was not plain to me either. how that would help-maybe it created some sort of diversion into a spill way that keeps it away from the flow into the 3G dam.

If there’s an earthquake while that thing is flooded, it won’t be pretty. And given the unsoundness of how it was built, it will eventually go somewhere down the road -sooner or later.


1,254 posted on 07/19/2020 12:02:35 PM PDT by greeneyes ( Moderation In Pursuit of Justice is NO Virtue--LET FREEDOM RING)
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To: LonePalm

My thought is that they blew a dam downstream to lower tail-water at the 3G dam.

2 water levels to keep in mind, head water (the high side of the dam) and tail water (low side of the dam). If the tailwater gets too high, then the delta between the headwater and tailwater is smaller and reduces the flow of water through the dam. Not usually an issue for the spillway since it pours over top of a gated area higher up on the dam, but the water flow through the hydroelectric plant is reduced as the tailwater rises relative to the outlets where the water through the plant exits.

From an electrical standpoint, high tailwater reduces the output of the dam and if it’s too high, there isn’t enough delta between headwater and tailwater to operate the plant. If that happens, they shut down units and NO water flows through the plant, relying only on the spillways.

Given the amount of water they need to move, they need all the flow through the dam that they can get. If tailwater was so high that they couldn’t operate the generating plant, they would only have the spillways to rely on for flow. That might be the reason that they allegedly blew a dam downstream - to lower tailwater so that 3G could utilize the path through the plant as well as the spillway for water movement.


1,261 posted on 07/19/2020 12:16:38 PM PDT by meyer (WWG1WGA, MAGA! Derps vs. Patriots, choose your side.)
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To: LonePalm

Using dynamite to fix a problem with a dam just seems like such a communist thing to do.


1,461 posted on 07/19/2020 7:19:01 PM PDT by ichabod1 (He's a vindictive SOB but he's *our* vindictive SOB.)
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