To bad it's water and not beer. I could take care of problem myself.

Chuck McCown wrote:
Good use for aging nukes.
*From:* Josh Reynolds
*Sent:* Monday, February 13, 2017 11:38 AM
*To:* af@afmug.com
*Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] OT - Oroville dam
O/T Physics question:
What kind of energy would be required to cause evaporation of some of the water?
Would this be possible?
On Feb 13, 2017 12:36 PM, "Chuck McCown" <ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:

    Easy to armchair quarterback but I would think they could bolt 1
    inch plates over the hole in the main spillway, put some I beam
    piles under the plates and open it back up.  At least until they
    take some inches off the reservoir.  I wonder if there is a way
    they can set the angle on the turbines to waste more water there too.

    -----Original Message----- From: Robert Andrews
    Sent: Monday, February 13, 2017 11:28 AM
    To: af@afmug.com
    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - Oroville dam

    As of this morning they are saying the regular spillway is supporting
    the 100K cfs without further damage.    If that it true, then there is
    the ability to deal with what's happening over the next couple of
    weeks,
    which looks like 4-5 sequential storms.   We got a 4-5 day break in
    weather this week but if it goes back to last months pattern we are in
    serious trouble throughout the west.  That spillway needs to do
    100K cfs
    for weeks to keep pressure off the hillside below the emergency
    spillway.   Californa and the Feds were sued over in 2005 to put
    concrete down on that hillside by the Sierra Club. The worse case
    situation is that the lake goes over the emergency spillway, it erodes
    below, the spillway fails and the hill below what was the spillway
    just
    keeps going away.   Moving water, and it would be a lot, would grand
    canyon the hill...  It would be enough water to destroy most of the
    feather river and Sacramento levee system below the dam..   That would
    be really really bad...   ( Inlaws in Yuba city )...

    On 02/13/2017 08:47 AM, Jason Wilson wrote:

        100,000cfs is correct.  That spillway will support 250,000cfs,
        but the
        Feather River channel will only support about 216,000cfs.  It
        has been
        10 years since the Channel has been stressed to this point,
        last time
        there were levee breaches.  Their hope is to drawdown the
        reservoir 50
        feet below the rim to do a couple things, one is to take
        pressure off of
        the presumed damaged emergency spillway.  The other is to make
        room for
        precip that is coming into california towards the end of the
        week.  Of
        course they cannot do any repairs to the facility until after
        the rainy
        season is over, and the snowmelt had finished.



        Jason Wilson
        Remotely Located
        Providing High Speed Internet to out of the way places.
        530-651-1736 <tel:530-651-1736>
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        www.remotelylocated.com <http://www.remotelylocated.com>
        <http://www.remotelylocated.com <http://www.remotelylocated.com>>

        On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 8:31 AM, Bill Prince <part15...@gmail.com
        <mailto:part15...@gmail.com>> wrote:

            I heard a reporter saying that the water going over that
        spillway
            was doing 100,000 cubic feet per second. I have a really
        hard time
            visualizing that amount of water. Could also have been a
        mis-quote
            by the reporter...


            bp
            <part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

            On 2/13/2017 8:11 AM, Ken Hohhof wrote:


                So the �good news� is they�re going to drop bags
            of rocks
                from helicopters?____

                __�__

                I hope my good news never involves helicopters
            dropping rocks.____




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