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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Finaly got a good camera, now shooting with the fujifilm x-10, it costs a bit of money but I love this thing!! Still experimenting tho, gotta figure out how to work with the aperture.
“Rockwell Tradition in High Performance Aerospace Vehicles: XB-70, X-30 National Aero-Space Plane, Space Shuttle, X-15, B-1B Lancer, X-10 Navaho, and Apollo Saturn."
Artwork by R. Hargrave
Date: September 12, 1988
Mike Acs's Collection: SR288
Removing Radioactive Material from Tray in Graphite Reactor, 1946.

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⚛ The Modern X-10
⚛ Table of Elements / X-10
An installment in the X-10 Graphite Reactor hall displaying visual representations of the elements. Each panel contains extensive information on each element presented.
⚛ X-10′s Rod-Fondling Mannequins / ORNL
These fellows are set up on the loading elevator to demonstrate the loading methods of the X-10 Graphite Reactor. There are three models: two hold a jamming rod, used to push uranium fuel slugs far into the reactor, and the third to their side, carefully monitoring the reactor’s state throughout the process.
The fuel elements consisted of natural uranium slugs with aluminum cladding, around 4 in. long and 1.1 in. in diameter. Its moderator was constructed from large graphite blocks, into which these uranium slugs were directly inserted from the loading face of the reactor.
Bridge tubes connect the face of the reactor to its uranium-graphite lattice, bypassing a concrete shield. Each loading channel has a specific label or number, and there are 1248 total running through the graphite moderator structure. Normally these channels are sealed with plugs at the reactor face. In the refueling process, these plugs are removed and fuel slugs are loaded into the core, holding around 39 to 54 slugs each. The spent fuel will thus be ejected from the far end of the reactor, falling into a pool of water that provides shielding from radiation. These operations were conducted only when the reactor was shut down to avoid complications with exposure.