The force of the initial slip caused the boiler to prime, carrying water over into the regulator valve and jamming it open. This allowed passage of steam through to the cylinders, perpetuating the slip and accelerating the driving wheels. When the driver attempted to wind the reversing gear back into mid-position to halt the slip, the force of the motion spun it into full-forward position, and the driving wheels reached a rotational speed of 140 miles per hour before the cylinder heads blew off and the motion disintegrated.
The driver suffered major injury to his arms, as a result of the screw reversing lever whipping around when he released it.
Are all coalmines in UK closed now?
Effectively yes, all closed now I believe, but there is a preserved/museum "footrail" mine in Apedale near Newcastle-under-Lyme which is run by the ex-miners who said that they have easy access to perfect coal (low in both sulphur and chlorine) but they can't find a way to dig or sell it legally! https://www.apedale.co.uk/see-and-do/mine-tours/ is well worth going down - I have done both the extended (deep) tours but you need to be fit to get back up out of it! I shan't be doing it again...
2.0 kW/4.62 MWh pa in Ripples, 4.5 kWp W-facing pv, 9.5 kWh batt
30 solar thermal tubes, 2MWh pa in Stockport, plus Congleton and Kinlochbervie Hydros,
Most travel by bike, walking or bus/train. Veg, fruit - and Bees!
The force of the initial slip caused the boiler to prime, carrying water over into the regulator valve and jamming it open. This allowed passage of steam through to the cylinders, perpetuating the slip and accelerating the driving wheels. When the driver attempted to wind the reversing gear back into mid-position to halt the slip, the force of the motion spun it into full-forward position, and the driving wheels reached a rotational speed of 140 miles per hour before the cylinder heads blew off and the motion disintegrated.
The driver suffered major injury to his arms, as a result of the screw reversing lever whipping around when he released it.
Are all coalmines in UK closed now?
Effectively yes, all closed now I believe, but there is a preserved/museum "footrail" mine in Apedale near Newcastle-under-Lyme which is run by the ex-miners who said that they have easy access to perfect coal (low in both sulphur and chlorine) but they can't find a way to dig or sell it legally! https://www.apedale.co.uk/see-and-do/mine-tours/ is well worth going down - I have done both the extended (deep) tours but you need to be fit to get back up out of it! I shan't be doing it again...
Free coal ............ in our £10 sacks????
1750w Vertical PV micro inverters
3800w almost horizontal/south
Aarrow Becton 7 Woodburner
Dream 3kw ASHP only connected to summer Pool.
Allotment heavy clay.
1.784kw Kirk Hill
0.875kw Derril Water
0.2kwWhitelaw Brae
1kw Harlow Hydro.
smegal wrote: ↑Mon Sep 30, 2024 9:18 am
They must be burning the last bit up. 230 MW AT 09:18.
And now, 11.19, 430 MW while curtailing wind output from East Anglia One and Greater Gabbard to the tune of 775 MW's.
Unless there is some other reason for them supplying only 50% of their potential while other wind farms nearby at similar or less wind speeds are generating at 99%!
That is impressive Dan. And if I'm remembering correctly, the spike in demand that was actually greater than the trough from covid, was due to Germany (and the UK) increasing FF generation to get France through a bad 18month period when about half of their reactors had to shut down for work due to safety concerns.
Take out the trough and peak, and the trend line does look very positive and consistent.
8.7kWp PV [2.12kWp SSW + 4.61kWp ESE PV + 2.0kWp WNW PV]
Two BEV's.
Two small A2A heatpumps.
20kWh Battery storage.