The overpressure from the first bomb on each side blew the concrete caps off of the secondary air shafts.
No doubt that same overpressure killed everyone inside the facility instantly too.
The overpressure from the first bomb on each side blew the concrete caps off of the secondary air shafts.
The site was abandoned, everybody who worked there had to be taken someplace safer, at least the people who work under the mountain. At least that's the square my money's on. The sealing of the entrances and shafts done to make USAF and Israeli special forces jobs harder. Honestly wonder if the overpressure from the first two weapons that went through the vents perpetrated down through them into the main cascade. It's likely academic since there were five more MOP's that blew up in the shafts.If they had the air shaft capped with dirt and concrete, as the entrances, it's highly probably that there was nobody alive even before the bombs went in.![]()
No doubt that same overpressure killed everyone inside the facility instantly too.
Wow, General Caine this morning was dynamite. His part of the briefing was masterful, that was expert use of storytelling messaging to be persuasive that separates very good leaders from exceptional ones. Our director of engineering called and insisted that I watch. Just to be clear, I'm not cheerleading a political side, we studied that topic in business school. My admiration is from how hard that is to pull off and come off genuine
I'm not sure there's an option, at least for massive facilities.Sorry, am I the only one who think of building an underground site and then making a direct ventilation shaft is a bad idea?
I'm not an expert in civil construction, but wouldn't making an "N" shaped ventilation shaft have been safer? Maybe because of ventilation efficiency issues?
It's like building the Death Star and leaving an exhaust port that goes directly down to the reactor... who would ever think that the Rebels could attack right there?
Probably very difficult to drill an N-shaped hole 90m down..Sorry, am I the only one who think of building an underground site and then making a direct ventilation shaft is a bad idea?
I'm not an expert in civil construction, but wouldn't making an "N" shaped ventilation shaft have been safer? Maybe because of ventilation efficiency issues?
It's like building the Death Star and leaving an exhaust port that goes directly down to the reactor... who would ever think that the Rebels could attack right there?
Well, a L-shaped at least could be made relatively easily - connecting vertical shaft with horizontal tunnel.Probably very difficult to drill an N-shaped hole 90m down..
Not sure that would help much, the over-pressure will still travel through the only gap it sees.Well, a L-shaped at least could be made relatively easily - connecting vertical shaft with horizontal tunnel.
Yes,one does get the feeling that maybe this guy designed the ventilation systemSorry, am I the only one who think of building an underground site and then making a direct ventilation shaft is a bad idea?
I'm not an expert in civil construction, but wouldn't making an "N" shaped ventilation shaft have been safer? Maybe because of ventilation efficiency issues?
It's like building the Death Star and leaving an exhaust port that goes directly down to the reactor... who would ever think that the Rebels could attack right there?
How would the diagonal shaft be dug? And what is going to support the large "wedge" of rock that is hanging over the diagonal shaft?Sorry, am I the only one who think of building an underground site and then making a direct ventilation shaft is a bad idea?
I'm not an expert in civil construction, but wouldn't making an "N" shaped ventilation shaft have been safer? Maybe because of ventilation efficiency issues?
Sorry, am I the only one who think of building an underground site and then making a direct ventilation shaft is a bad idea?
I'm not an expert in civil construction, but wouldn't making an "N" shaped ventilation shaft have been safer? Maybe because of ventilation efficiency issues?
I'm hoping that the Mossad had shared that with the US.I`ve just given this thread a quick once over and strangely no one seems to have posted the intel labs graphic of fordow,which is based on publicly available data.
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I keep forgetting just how freaking heavy a B-52 can be...
Yes...it gives attention.Controversy gets clicks.Who knew?
The mood change from "no damage!" to "we actually didn't know" and to "very serious damage, probably unusable" in Iranian reports seems to be corresponding to the progress of digging in Fodrow)Iran foreign minister confirms...they are currently unusable
Some say the damage was minimal:
As mentioned both the IDF and DOD had people on site with knowledge of the whole structure so I’m inclined to believe the report from general Caine.
People using open source intelligence then their own conclusions should garner high levels of scepticism.