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For me in Ohio I find it strange that none of the videos even show the dam. I looked it up on G.maps and was like oh that is big.
Things may start to take a turn for the worst. Current Facts: Use of the damaged spillway at 100,000 CFS the lake is dropping approximately 8’ per 24 hour period. (They will be shutting it down for a few hours soon to inspect the erosion to see if they can continue dumping water down it at this rate) The pipes which release water through the Hydro generators (max 14,000 CFS) are closed due to debris. (Its true they can only flow water when they are able to generate and deliver electricity The diversion tunnels which would allow draining the lake in the dam proper by passing the hydro, were damage years ago and are unusable. Lake level on 2/1 = 851’ Lake Full level (which was achieved on 2/12 ) = 901’ (increased 50’ with 4” falling over 12 days)Next Major rain system to arrive Wed Eve. (Forecast are anywhere from 5-11” but the huge factor will be how much of it falls as snow vs rain in the mts around the watershed) (HUGE wildcard) Estimated Lake level by Wednesday 2/15 eve = 877’ (a buffer of only 24’ which is about ½ of what they had going in the last major rain event) So if less rain falls and more falls as snow, and there is no substantial change in erosion in the damage spillway, they will be able to make it through this. If more rain than snow falls, and they are forced to pull back releasing water in the only way they can right now (via the damage spillway) then the lake is going over the emergency spillway. We now know this spillway was eroded very badly at 15,000 CFS in just one day. (Far from the designed capacity of 350,000 CFS) They are scrambling to shore up the emergency spillway, but I think this will not be able to mitigate this if they have to use it in earnest. These prospects are downright freighting and really speak to the inadequate tools that are at the disposal to avert all out failure of the spillway. (Becoming more likely, but Mother nature will ultimately decide that) Ton of info can be found here: www.drroyspencer.com
I don't think I'd want to be a crew traveling below the dam right now, thoughts of Johnstown PA would be running through my head.
I'm currently without service at Sierra Army Depot due to this washout in Doyle, CA. Believe it happpened on Sunday morning and UP crews are working around the clock to get it shored up and back online. When I drove by this afternoon, they have a good portion of the dirt replaced. Still lot's of work ahead before service is restored.Brian
Brian Looking at the photo does your vehicle have a cyclic and collective?