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Build your own nuclear reactor!


Suppose you really want your own nuclear reactor, but the price is a bit steep, you don’t have enough space, and the NRC licensing requirements are just too much of a hassle. If that’s your problem, you can now build a 1:350 scale model of an EPR. The price is about $30, the finished model fits in an area 79 x 84 cm (31 x 33 inches), and no NRC license is required. The model kit contains printed sheets of heavy paper that you cut, fold, and glue to create the various components.

The complete model, with about 2900 parts, is astonishingly detailed, with reactor vessel, steam generators, piping, cranes, emergency diesel generators, even turbine rotors.

It is said to take 150 to 300 hours to construct. If that is too much work for you, you can use the same kit but build a simpler version in which some or all of the internal components are eliminated. The simplest version is an architectural model only, with about 220 parts. That version is said to require about 55 hours to complete. On the other hand, if you are really a serious model-builder, you won’t be satisfied with just one of these kits. You will want to build a three-unit plant!

The complete model would be an exceptional training tool. It would show spatial relationships within the plant far more vividly than drawings or even computer animations. It also might be a good gift for a high school student who is interested in nuclear engineering.

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Comments

Anonymous said…
I would much much prefer the real thing. I really wish i lived near one of the marvels, but we dont have any in Australia. Ah well...
Anonymous said…
Speaking of "an execeptional training tool", Gee, do you think the Jihad or the Timothy McVeigh wanna-bes could use one of these for their very own table top exercise on how to take out a nuke?

Paul,NIRS
Brian Mays said…
Frightening indeed! Just imagine what they might discover:

If you pour enough water on the containment building it gets soft and mushy!

The entire building is extremely inflammable!

Airplanes (also made of paper, of course) really don't cause much damage when they hit the plant. Oh well ... back to skyscrapers ...
Kevin McCoy said…
That's an interesting idea, Paul, but I don't think it holds up. If I were a terrorist (I'm not) bent on attacking a nuclear power plant, locating a specific component to attack would probably be the least of my worries.

To put it slightly different terms, suppose you wanted to break into a bank at night and steal all the money from the vault. Sure, you would need to know where the vault was, but the real challenge would be how to get into it.
Kevin McCoy said…
For more information on the EPR cardmodel, including an interesting discussion on the design of cardmodels and the recent history of cardmodeling, visit http://www.neimagazine.com/story.asp?sectionCode=76&storyCode=2025159
Anonymous said…
i am a high school student in india ,i want to make a model of a nuclear power plant for science model copetetion at national level can you help me out if so please reply me on my user account that is push_pendharkar@yahoo.com
i will be thankfull to you sir
Unknown said…
can some one just tell me where can i find the nuclear reactor if i want to buy the $30 one
plz contact me before 30th August
my email id is nasirmaniar@aol.in

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