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Good man. No pressure see http://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/30099/84557.GIF Gold Members inbound Ed View Quote Congrats guys! |
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Most threads are just little turdballs my dog wouldn't even sniff. Then, along comes a thread like this one, a gargantuan starfish stretcher, the kind you could take to school to show your friends.
This arfcom is best arfcom. |
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The next morning, Michael Matlock, 31, was seen riding an ATV in Gridley and towing a gun safe, authorities say. Tailed by state Department of Water Resources employees who became suspicious, Matlock ran away when his vehicle got stuck on railroad tracks, investigators said. The ATV, the trailer and the gun safe had all been stolen, officials said. Matlock was identified as the ATV driver and arrested on suspicion of burglary, vehicle theft and looting during an emergency, officials said." View Quote Congratulations Colombo, you cracked the goddamned case. |
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As current as we can get. From about 11 am today. View Quote Looking at the latest pictures and video, I can't help but get one of those ominous feelings about the fact that I don't think anybody knows how deep of hole has been plunged into the earth at the midpoint of the main spillway where it's still intact and water falling into the side of the hill. Also the fact that now the other side of the broken part of the spillway is starting to show signs of a new stream of water along side it, I just keep waiting to watch the whole thing slide into the river in a massive landslide. I realize it's supposed to be on solid rock, but from our earlier discussions about the rotten rock at the E Spillway weir base, it makes me wonder how much water is getting injected by force into the fissures around that area. I hope it holds out, but what really concerns me is based on historical data, we haven't even begun to reach the part of the year where the dam REALLY fills up. That's several more months of pounding that part of the hill with water outflow of 20K to 100K per second. |
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The opening of a new channel on the left does pose a risk of erosion that headers/horseshoes its way up. The right side (as we are looking at it) got to a certain piont and stopped, but obviously that mountain is anything but uniform in its structure and weathering/fracturing.
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http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-live-updates-oroville-dam-during-oroville-evacuations-1487372201-htmlstory.html "Although Butte County sheriff’s officials say there were no reports of looting during recent evacuations below Ororville Dam, there were a handful of burglaries and robberies that targeted fleeing residents, officials said. The incidents began Sunday night, hours after authorities ordered more than 100,000 people to flee to high ground, according to the Butte County Sheriff’s Office. About 6:30 p.m., deputies said, Cody Bowles, 27, and Lucia Ripley, 31, carjacked the vehicle of an Oroville resident who was packing it to flee. The resident left the car running and was moving in and out of the house with items when the couple jumped into the vehicle, officials say. When the resident confronted the pair, they ran him over, seriously injuring him, officials say. Authorities are looking for the pair. About half an hour later, authorities said, Teran Washington 25, and a 16-year-old boy used a shotgun to blast through the front door of a local market and tried to ransack the business before they were confronted by neighbors. Though the two got away, deputies later searched their home and say they found the shotgun and arrested Washington and his young accomplice. The next morning, Michael Matlock, 31, was seen riding an ATV in Gridley and towing a gun safe, authorities say. Tailed by state Department of Water Resources employees who became suspicious, Matlock ran away when his vehicle got stuck on railroad tracks, investigators said. The ATV, the trailer and the gun safe had all been stolen, officials said. Matlock was identified as the ATV driver and arrested on suspicion of burglary, vehicle theft and looting during an emergency, officials said." View Quote And there is still no word on how many thieves ended up face down in a fast moving river |
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Good man. No pressure see http://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/30099/84557.GIF Gold Members inbound Ed View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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ok. Lorduss and HDLS Looked back through the early pages of the thread and they stood out. Good man. No pressure see http://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/30099/84557.GIF Gold Members inbound Ed Given that bureaucrats are now making decisions this is unlikely to go well. |
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When they get to the point of rebuilding the spillway, is it reasonable to think they can effect repairs that will make the spillway usable in one season? Not sure how much time they have to prep and stage materials, through July or August perhaps when inflow is low enough for the power plant outlets to maintain level for the rest of the season?
Is a water bridge a viable alternative? Would it be viable for an interim solution until a solid bed is constructed? Is it even reasonable for the engineering plan and approvals to be completed by mid summer? |
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Looks like Monday is going to be very interesting. If the forecast holds true for Monday depending on the snow elevation we could see that lake go up pretty quick
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From what I recall, that's not granite as seen there. Granite underlies the dam, but what you're looking at is metamorphic country rock. Likely greenstone, which is typically altered basalt. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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It's SCOURED out. That blueish stone appears to be granite, and it also appears that the depth of the bed is relatively stable, there is still a lot of erosion at the banks of the channel. From what I recall, that's not granite as seen there. Granite underlies the dam, but what you're looking at is metamorphic country rock. Likely greenstone, which is typically altered basalt. |
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To the best of my knowledge no mining equipment ever broke through ice at the Centralia mine. Winters here are relatively mild at +/- 400 feet above sea level. I've never seen a river here ice over in over 50 years here. There were several land slides of spoils through the years and a large walking dragline sunk in a soft spot once. The tub was tilted about 30 degrees from level. It walked free after undermining material and re-constructing a new pad under the opposite side of the sunken portion of the tub. Link to video? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Some history of the dam The bucket wheel excavator (shown bottom right) was built by the company I worked for in the mid 60's. More history Interesting information. Were you involved with the tear down and relocation? That Krupp bucket wheel excavator system ended up at the Centralia, WA coal mine where it was used for about 25 years or more for pre-stripping coal seams. It was used in 2 different pit areas as I recall. I started work at the mine when it was in the second area and spent many an hour keeping it maintained and operating. To the best of my knowledge no mining equipment ever broke through ice at the Centralia mine. Winters here are relatively mild at +/- 400 feet above sea level. I've never seen a river here ice over in over 50 years here. There were several land slides of spoils through the years and a large walking dragline sunk in a soft spot once. The tub was tilted about 30 degrees from level. It walked free after undermining material and re-constructing a new pad under the opposite side of the sunken portion of the tub. Link to video? |
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Sorry. Had to fix Mom dinner.
HDLS. Log out and in. Another bet I'm happy to pay Ed |
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Throw him and all of the other looters into the holes that mother nature so graciously provided below the espillway. I'm dead fucking serious, the world would be a better place.
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Dunno if it's been mentioned in this thread or not, but my local (MT) TV station just reported that during the Oroville evac orders someone broke into a Vietnam vet's house and stole 20+ medals. So many POS' running around. Firing squad I look at it this way. The criminals that used the spillway disaster to take advantage of other citizens should get to see the spillway up close by making them hop in the water at the exit of the spillway gates. |
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I look at it this way. The criminals that used the spillway disaster to take advantage of other citizens should get to see the spillway up close by making them hop in the water at the exit of the spillway gates. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Dunno if it's been mentioned in this thread or not, but my local (MT) TV station just reported that during the Oroville evac orders someone broke into a Vietnam vet's house and stole 20+ medals. So many POS' running around. Firing squad I look at it this way. The criminals that used the spillway disaster to take advantage of other citizens should get to see the spillway up close by making them hop in the water at the exit of the spillway gates. Give them a shovel and make them clear a channel back to the the turbine outlets. |
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Throw him and all of the other looters into the holes that mother nature so graciously provided below the espillway. I'm dead fucking serious, the world would be a better place. View Quote Nah, just wait till they fire up the spillway to 100k again and put them on the mother of all slip & slides! |
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Sublime - April 29, 1992 (Rodney King riots) |
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https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C45TuYTUcAAeoJE.jpg View Quote Stripper and Pimp Ed |
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Nah, just wait till they fire up the spillway to 100k again and put them on the mother of all slip & slides! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Throw him and all of the other looters into the holes that mother nature so graciously provided below the espillway. I'm dead fucking serious, the world would be a better place. Nah, just wait till they fire up the spillway to 100k again and put them on the mother of all slip & slides! |
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https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C45TuYTUcAAeoJE.jpg Stripper and Pimp Ed |
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why build ski jump in main spillway? you think it would be better to build a gizmo rather than working to repair the structure? Aux spillway lets you do whatever you want as you please without depending solely on the Espill or working in the spillway with the gates under a full head. Fuck that FBHO because it needs to be said View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
why build ski jump in main spillway? you think it would be better to build a gizmo rather than working to repair the structure? Aux spillway lets you do whatever you want as you please without depending solely on the Espill or working in the spillway with the gates under a full head. Fuck that FBHO because it needs to be said Quoted:
When they get to the point of rebuilding the spillway, is it reasonable to think they can effect repairs that will make the spillway usable in one season? Not sure how much time they have to prep and stage materials, through July or August perhaps when inflow is low enough for the power plant outlets to maintain level for the rest of the season? Is a water bridge a viable alternative? Would it be viable for an interim solution until a solid bed is constructed? Is it even reasonable for the engineering plan and approvals to be completed by mid summer? Since the two are related I'm putting both in the same post. WWace - My thinking on the ski-jump is based on what Piratepaste40 is mentioning above...they will probably have a very short amount of time this year to actually do repairs to the main spillway this year, if at all. If they only have a few months where the water level can be managed < 850' by the hydroelectric portion of the dam, perhaps they can build the ski jump to allow it to still be functional with less damage down stream until a new spillway can be built in a new location, assuming the current spillway is beyond repair. My guess is that it could take the better part of a year or more to design and build a new spill way. Likely they'd need to build a coffer dam in the current lake at low levels to provide them a dry work site to do the major excavations needed. If the new spillway were to go in near the parking lot, remember that the bed rock (or whatever we're calling the rock) is right near the surface, meaning some SIGNIFICANT excavation would be required to get to down to the level needed for flood control above 850'. To me the ski jump would be something to buy time if it is determined that the main spill way would be too fragile to continue to use long term in its current state. I guess it could be a viable long term plan if they removed the remainder of the original spillway and allowed the water to splash down on the newly exposed rock that was opened up after the failure we've seen. Based on the latest flows it seems like it has somewhat stabilized, but we won't know until they shut down flow. |
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So you remember the GE Amplydine on the excavator. Did you know an electrical guy who may have worked on the excavator at Oroville named Don Geraci? View Quote Almost 50 years ago I can't remember hardly anyone's name. That name doesn't ring a bell. I didn't work in the power end of things, I was a draftsman in the control end. |
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From what I recall, that's not granite as seen there. Granite underlies the dam, but what you're looking at is metamorphic country rock. Likely greenstone, which is typically altered basalt. View Quote |
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Something I pulled together really quick comparing the current inlet to the spillway gates to the original picture at its commissioning. The photos aren't from exactly the same place, but I overlayed the shape today onto a rotated and sized version of the original picture and they match up pretty closely.
Recent: Attached File Original: Attached File |
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I am watching FOX40 and there was a reporter at the bottom of the spillway and there was a lot of dirty water coming over that big rock. First shot it was clear then they cut to another scene, when they came back it was that way. Span of about 15sec in between.
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I am watching FOX40 and there was a reporter at the bottom of the spillway and there was a lot of dirty water coming over that big rock. First shot it was clear then they cut to another scene, when they came back it was that way. Span of about 15sec in between. View Quote Rut-roh. Are the beating feet or did they not even notice? |
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https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C45cYuwUkAASD80.jpg https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C45calzVMAANd6O.jpg View Quote Would you call these people: "Butte Pirates?" |
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Looks like they didn't notice. Here is the before and after screenshot's. http://i.imgur.com/KLa2OJD.png http://i.imgur.com/x06DWzr.png View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Rut-roh. Are the beating feet or did they not even notice? Here is the before and after screenshot's. http://i.imgur.com/KLa2OJD.png http://i.imgur.com/x06DWzr.png New erosion point. Question is what/where is it. I am guessing under the actual spillway as it is coming out of both sides?? |
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New erosion point. Question is what/where is it. I am guessing under the actual spillway as it is coming out of both sides?? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Rut-roh. Are the beating feet or did they not even notice? Here is the before and after screenshot's. http://i.imgur.com/KLa2OJD.png http://i.imgur.com/x06DWzr.png New erosion point. Question is what/where is it. I am guessing under the actual spillway as it is coming out of both sides?? It appears to be that big ass rock that has been splitting the flow down the busted spillway. Maybe that sucker is finally about to drop into the pile in front of the turbine outlets. That is going to suck to move if so. |
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Looks like they didn't notice. Here is the before and after screenshot's. http://i.imgur.com/KLa2OJD.png http://i.imgur.com/x06DWzr.png View Quote Where is the report? My google fu must be weak tonight but I can't find anything from Fox40 today aside from a snippet about some scammers posing as evacuees. |
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New erosion point. Question is what/where is it. I am guessing under the actual spillway as it is coming out of both sides?? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Rut-roh. Are the beating feet or did they not even notice? Looks like they didn't notice. Here is the before and after screenshot's. http://i.imgur.com/KLa2OJD.png http://i.imgur.com/x06DWzr.png New erosion point. Question is what/where is it. I am guessing under the actual spillway as it is coming out of both sides?? On the left side of the screen, the new channel of spillover from the broken spillway noticed earlier today is now flowing clear. An indication that flow has hit bedrock already. The runoff on the outside of the wall on that side has gone from clear to muddy. Has that flow undermined a bank to the outside that has fallen in? It doesn't look like the flow upstream has dug deeper because the water is clear upstream in photos. Maybe something related to the flow in that new channel is causing the flow by the wall to shift it's course and pick up dirt? Maybe reducing the flow through the floodgates is causing the water to no longer make the jump and it's hitting in the big hole and carrying more sediment out of there from underneath the spillway flow. And on the big rock something has given way on the right side of the spillway that has exposed dirt to the flow. Possibly another floor channel of the spillway has come up and water is getting under it, washing the fill out from underneath. That could be related to the flow reduction and also the muddy water running down the outside of the spillway wall. Or another side panel has finally failed and the flow is taking out more fill there. Whatever it is, it's on the lower portion of the spillway, which is already written off as a total loss. |
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