I remember when they were crash testing casks to make sure they would remain intact and contain the waste in case of an accident. I assume they have now been tested to withstand terrorist bombing as well. But the government decided the safety of a few people far away from waste buried inside a mountain is worth more than the safety of the many people that live near the waste currently stored at nuclear power plants. So I don't think the casks have had much use.
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John W. Coke posted
Lockwood Brothers Inc moving casks for nuclear waste. |
John W. Coke
posted three pictures of a cask and its special DODX freight car.
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Sarah Summers Martin posted, cropped Anyone know what this is? Michael Moran: Department of Defense Nuclear Cask Car for carrying atomic material. It has DODX reporting marks. If it were loaded it would most likely have idler flats on either side plus an escort caboose with an armed escort. [And a train would have just those two flat cars, this car and the caboose. There are several comments about what he speed restriction would be. Note in the photo that there appearse to be a second DODX car in this train. Some comments indicate these carried atomic fuel, instead of waste, to shipyards that support aircraft carriers and submarines.]
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The following flatcar appears to be designed for the type of "intermodal" cask that John's photo at the top shows.
The DODX car is an M-140 Control Rod Railroad Shipping Container used by Naval Reactors.
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