"hahaha what are you talking about?"
These terms can be Googled.
"No, they're not, and I dont think you know what that means."
You're telling my 3 mile Island was controlled by servers and desktop computers?
"So if I go from two pumps to eight, that's not more complex?"
Depends on how those pumps are controlled. If the two pumps are lead/lag, VFD driven, and controlled by PLCs monitoring many variables vs 8 pumps switched on across the line by an operator the 8 pump approach would be simpler.
"I dont even know what you're trying to say here."-- Nuclear plants on an elementary level are designed to trip rather easily when something goes wrong.
"Certain rad detectors have the ability to trip the facility. Supplementary or not, these things increase the complexity of the overall facility."-- Not much more complexity.
"I don't think you understand controls in an industrial setting."-- So your saying every single data input automatically controls, or has the ability to trip the reactor instead of just lighting up an annunciator?
So in your words, how does France keep the lights on? I've never set foot in RTE or a French generating station, so you would easily know more than me on this one.
"What the hell is a AC and DC control schematic? I've never heard of that before."
If you don't know that generating station and substations have an extensive 125 volt DC system to control indicators, sensors, breaker trip solenoids, gauges, auxiliary relays, protection relays, ect ect then your rebuttal would be mere projection.
AC power can dip and sag during a fault, so you have to use batteries and DC power for the sensing and control in any plant.
