Kutt said:
Much like holding a handful of fuel pellets, I'm assuming that holding a ball of raw nuclear material that is radioactive enough to be warm to the touch is bad for ones health.
This is why human handling of nuclear fuel (such as at a fuel processing plant) is done through very thick glass and with lead-insulated gloves.
Kutt, you're just a
wealth of misinformation.
I toured a fuel pelletizing plant south of St Louis.
The fuel comes in as gas in cylinders and leaves as small green pellets that look like rabbit food.
The automated machinery is reminiscent of cigarette manufacturing equipment.
You can stand right beside it and watch the pellets go by on little conveyor belts.
Nice ladies carry trays of it where it needs to go, wearing thin gloves just like in a cafeteria.
As visitors we were not allowed to handle it, it was after all 'snm' and you don't want to get fingerprints on it.
The equipment you describe is for handling high level radioactive waste not new fuel.
Fuel is shipped to the power plant on flatbed trucks driven by regular truck drivers over regular highways. They stop for lunch at regular truck stops.
When we take it from the truck we wear gloves of thin cotton, again so as to not get fingerprints on it.
New fuel is barely (if at all) radioactive and I have stood amidst tons of it in our new fuel storage room.
Please spend some time educating yourself.
And quit trying to scare people.
old jim