How Chernobyl Exploded - PART ONE: April 25th, 1986

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  • čas přidán 22. 04. 2024
  • The time is midnight, April 25th, 1986. A pleasant warm Friday in the northern region of the Kyiv oblast. And in a little over 25 hours, this scene will be changed forever. Tomorrow, the fourth reactor of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant will explode, two dying due to the explosion, and another twenty-nine succumbing to radiation related illnesses. The total number of deaths can only be estimated in the thousands. But how did Chernobyl explode? Let us follow that story along.
    With thanks to the following for creating the locations seen in this video:
    Control Room 4 - Hydroproject.
    / discord
    Control Room 3 - Unit Three
    / discord
    Exterior - Gherkinbeans
    / discord
    With thanks to Bobby and Sredmash for reviewing the scripts.

Komentáře • 143

  • @WhereIsTheCheese
    @WhereIsTheCheese Před 29 dny +220

    It’s a shame that the cgi didn’t capture the sheer awesomeness that is Akimov’s mustache.

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Před 29 dny +50

      Truly a shame for all the mustaches and beards in the Control Room

    • @henriknilsson7851
      @henriknilsson7851 Před 29 dny +18

      Yes, the youthful aggression of Toptunov’s nascent mustache is also a sight to behold!

    • @chieftainmk_11
      @chieftainmk_11 Před 29 dny +7

      @@thatchernobylguy2915Truly.

    • @Soldier600
      @Soldier600 Před 29 dny +1

      @@thatchernobylguy2915it’s really a shame

    • @hemfri07
      @hemfri07 Před 29 dny +1

      And there are no special CCCP cigarettes,and some new age guru to advise them what to do"just breathe,and feel calmness (+metalic taiste in mouth+ozone)Sandguru would say that is normal,and we neeed more beardes and silly mustaches,like adi hade :) :) :)☺☺☺ +voce over"RAISE the power-raise the power" - ,or from movie "EdWood" line Bella lagossi "Pull the strings,Pull the strings" ....KABOOOOOM!

  • @AskMrScience
    @AskMrScience Před 29 dny +90

    Rock em Sock em robots in the control room. There's your problem!

  • @oscarr.g.509
    @oscarr.g.509 Před 29 dny +33

    One does not simply delay a turbine rundown experiment in an RBMK nuclear reactor 👌 I'm currently reading Midnight at Chernobyl (following your references), and having these videos this week is like the icing on the cake. THANK YOU !!!

    • @Winston-lf7sb
      @Winston-lf7sb Před 26 dny

      exactly.
      design was ok.
      it was being operated improperly.
      trying to run diagnostics and shut down while being constantly asked to turn back on to produce power.
      they should have cancelled the diagbostic or pushed hard and run the diagnostics without delays.
      they kept turning it on and off.
      pulling these rods up and down out of the reactor without then properly, and slowly cooling.
      they warped the rods and jammed the entire mechanism.

    • @pedroalmeida555
      @pedroalmeida555 Před 6 dny

      ​@@Winston-lf7sbThe increase reactivity with AZ5 press was ok?

  • @TikhonT.
    @TikhonT. Před 28 dny +17

    1:56 I am summoned every time the red mercedes is mentioned

  • @Frankthetank-zr5mc
    @Frankthetank-zr5mc Před 29 dny +22

    Thanks for posting. Don’t let one day mess it up.

    • @ericluffy7970
      @ericluffy7970 Před 29 dny

      This is am awesome breakdown. I'll take as many spins as I can get on these subjects. Helps to get the best perspective generally to make us all most best to stop it from reoccurring

    • @ericluffy7970
      @ericluffy7970 Před 29 dny +3

      Dude! I just got it! That was a Fallout joke wasn't it? You're a freaking genius!
      Don't let one day mess up 1,000 years 😂🎉😮😢

  • @michaelmoser4537
    @michaelmoser4537 Před 17 dny +4

    you didn't mention a known design issue: the RBMK had an unusually large positive void coefficient. RBMK doesn't keep water inside the reactor under pressure, now you end up with fewer water within the reactor, as the water evaporates. This creates temporary voids. Now water is also a neutron absorber, so that these voids are resulting in a stronger chain reaction and increasing the thermal output. This means you have a positive feedback loop built-in, by design. Eventually the whole thing exploded...
    The book "Midnight in Chernobyl" by Adam Higginbotham mentions an accident at the first installation of the RBMK reactor in Leningrad (a partial meltdown, like at Three Misle Island!)
    "On the night of November 30, 1975, just over a year after it had first reached full
    operating capacity, Unit One of the Leningrad nuclear power plant was being
    brought back online after scheduled maintenance when it began to run out of
    control. The AZ-5 emergency protection system was tripped, but before the chain
    reaction could be stopped, a partial meltdown occurred, destroying or damaging
    thirty-two fuel assemblies and releasing radiation into the atmosphere over the Gulf
    of Finland. It was the first major accident involving an RBMK reactor, and the
    Ministry of Medium Machine Building set up a commission to investigate what had
    gone wrong. Afterward, the official line was that a manufacturing defect had led to
    the destruction of a single fuel channel. But the commission knew otherwise: the
    accident was the result of the design faults inherent in the reactor and caused by an
    uncontrollable increase in the steam void coefficient.
    Sredmash suppressed the commission’s findings and covered up the accident. The
    operators of other RBMK plants were never informed of its true causes. Nevertheless,
    the commission made several important recommendations, to be applied to all
    RBMK-1000 reactors: develop new safety regulations to protect them in the event of
    coolant loss; analyze what would happen in the event of a sharp rise in steam in the
    core; and devise a faster-acting emergency protection system. Despite their apparent
    urgency, the reactor designers failed to act on a single one of these directives, and
    Moscow promptly ordered more of the reactors to be built. The day after the
    Leningrad meltdown, the Soviet Union’s Council of Ministers gave its final approval
    to construct a second pair of RBMK-1000 units in Chernobyl, expanding the
    station’s projected output to an impressive 4,000 megawatts"

  • @bumblebeerror9019
    @bumblebeerror9019 Před 27 dny +4

    I stumbled upon your channel by accident - I’ve had a massive special interest in nuclear disasters for months now, Chernobyl in particular, and you’re the first person I’ve found who has a detailed rundown of the events and sources for them listed !! Excellent work, my guy.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 Před 25 dny +1

      Ah yes the "hey guys I found this wiki thing" version. Magnifique!

  • @danielle3064
    @danielle3064 Před 29 dny +3

    Yoooo this is exactly the kind of timeline breakdown I've been wanting! Can't wait for part 2! This channel is so slept on you deserve all the views!

  • @ellenbryn
    @ellenbryn Před 27 dny +4

    Hearing about it in so much detail so many years later is surreal. I appreciate it very much.
    I just wonder if the current generation can imagine what it was like pre-internet and, mostly, pre cable TV, when we might get as much news in a week as most of us can view now in half an hour by following links and watching full color videos, sometimes live, from all over the world.
    back then we just had a few news shows a day on TV; more in-depth info of what happened yesterday was in the morning paper. or we could listen to news radio which often had more current breaking news, but ssldom reported anything outside one's local area.

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs Před 25 dny +1

      So true. Back when it happened, I got the majority of my information about Chernobyl from National Geographic, since they went into far more detail than the average paper or newscast did!

  • @willyengland
    @willyengland Před 29 dny +8

    Very detailed and clear! 👍👍
    Thank you!

  • @ExploreGamesAndMore
    @ExploreGamesAndMore Před 29 dny +9

    Nice video. Looking forward to the rest of the parts, but please take your time. I really appreciate all the detail you put in.

  • @Dream25_
    @Dream25_ Před 28 dny

    Another great video. I was thinking a month or so back how I would like to put together as detailed a timeline as possible for at least the week building up to the 26th, either to catalog in social media posts or just for my own personal reference, and I have a feeling that's pretty much what you've got planned for this week, so I'm really excited.

  • @markusw7833
    @markusw7833 Před 29 dny +13

    As xenon is mostly a product of iodine-135 decaying which is a product of nuclear fission when power is lowered xenon's concentration increases while the higher power iodine-135 is decaying and the lower power xenon let's call it utilization is less. Then, after about 4-6 hours, xenon concentration begins to be steeply reduced as its iodine-135 precursor is reduced and excess xenon is decaying. Ultimately with a power reduction the concentration of xenon is reduced as well, which is why the Kiev delay actually resulted in a depoisoning of the reactor.
    I think it's really important to know what the plan was for finishing the turbine vibration measurements. If the idea was to complete them at alternating loads between the two turbines then this is the virtually unknown event that got the ball rolling toward disaster. The Kiev delay depoisoned the reactor so the xenon narrative in the HBO mini-series is complete nonsense, but it's extremely likely the power level was intentionally reduced under 700 MW so that the remaining turbine could be disconnected with less steam in the system to complete these measurements as well the rundown test without shutting the reactor down. In addition to there being a video on this (in the Unanswered Questions series) we have recently found what appears to be an operating log confirming an intentional decision accompanying a KOM switch from Chernobyl. This separate program being left over is what caused a deviation from the power figure in the rundown testing program. The confusing thing is with turbogenerator no. 7 being disconnected at 13:05 their intentions for whether they originally intended to complete these measurements with both turbines available at 1500-1600 MW or if they intended to complete them at a lower power with one turbogenerator already being disconnected is unclear.

    • @mattipaajanen4109
      @mattipaajanen4109 Před 28 dny

      Just to add, the Xe-135 is not present uniformly in the reactor, but its local concentration depends on the local power density. Thus, reducing power by inserting control rods, reduces power at top of the reactor, and leads the top to poison further by Xe-135, whereas the bottom half can actually de-poison at the same time. But, I have no insight to power distributions and how it varied during power changes, this is mere speculation.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Před 28 dny +1

      The reactor was poisoned mostly in the center. The neutron flux distribution at low power was double humped with the peak at the top, meaning the top may have been the least poisoned. The graphite displacers did not cover the full height of the core based on this logic, that not much was going on at the top and bottom peripheries.

    • @shawn8464
      @shawn8464 Před 27 dny

      Huh

  • @nomercyinc6783
    @nomercyinc6783 Před 18 dny +3

    this reactor was always going to fail regardless of user inputs. this design was faulty from the drawing board

  • @kevinh.6587
    @kevinh.6587 Před 25 dny

    I always like checking out the videos on chernobyl. (I don't know why) anyway, thjs was an excellent video and excellent informative video and the best series on chernobyl i've seen. Thank you for sharing.

  • @Just.A.T-Rex
    @Just.A.T-Rex Před 27 dny +1

    Almost as good as the Stanford lecture series on nuclear physics and power and the classes specifically on Chernobyl. Great rehash of everything that professor went over with some more info on the background of the choices made.

  • @cascadianrangers728
    @cascadianrangers728 Před 18 dny +1

    Jesus I never knew they turned off the emergency cooling system through physically closing the goddamn valves. The thought of that much uranium sitting there and heating up with no way to stop it aside from control rods is blood chilling

  • @boloto98
    @boloto98 Před 29 dny

    holy shit that's a great video! quality stuff! i'm exited to see the next part

  • @swokatsamsiyu3590
    @swokatsamsiyu3590 Před 29 dny +3

    Too bad I can only give one "like" because this is just awesome. What a well-done video with these animations laying it out in such detail. There is one little oopsy pertaining to the Xenon poisoning. When you lower reactor power, initially Xenon levels will actually go UP because it will be produced as if you still were at full power, and the now lower neutron flux thus less burn-out. There's another thing. Every time you lower reactor power, you start that whole Xenon song-and-dance all over again. But apart from that, the video is great. Can't wait to see the next video in this series!

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Před 29 dny +2

      Both of these are mentioned in the video. At 3:30, for example. The second part is in the next video. :)

    • @swokatsamsiyu3590
      @swokatsamsiyu3590 Před 29 dny

      @@thatchernobylguy2915
      Got it. And now you're making us wait for the next part🙃

  • @spitfire0005
    @spitfire0005 Před 29 dny +2

    Why am i so hooked on everything surrounding old reactors and especially the history and happenings of old Russian reactors?

  • @veteransniper6955
    @veteransniper6955 Před 29 dny +4

    4:35 I think there too much shift of the blame to operators
    According to reactors design regulation all reactor safety critical parameters must be constantly monitored; continuous indication must be provided to operators; there must be thresholds determined and automatically checked and automatic shutdown initiated if safe range is violated. This was done for parameters like reactor's power, or power's increase rate.
    On the other hand, operative reactivity margin wasn't in the list of safety critical parameters, no of the above requirements was met, reactor's manual allowed to operate reactor up to several hours with program that calculates operative reactivity margin not working.
    While operative reactivity margin printout at that time indeed was lower than prescribed in reactor's manual, the flaw in program that calculated it was identified, and operator used graphical method to determine required parameter, which was within range, and it was later confirmed by processing recorded data.
    So there was no neglect to operative reactivity margin from operators, but it was neglect to that parameter by reactor designers

  • @SunBear69420
    @SunBear69420 Před 29 dny +6

    Hey i really liked the video buddy.

  • @adamf663
    @adamf663 Před 29 dny +3

    One thing you needed to emphasize is that xenon-135 is generated with a 4 hour delay through iodine-135 decay. That's why the spike appears. When the power output crashed, the xenon was still being generated at the rate from when the reactor was running at 1600mw. Once XE135 absorbs a neutron, it becomes XE136 which isn't a neutron poison. With most of the control rods out, and only xenon and water holding back the reactor, it was like a stretched slingshot. When the reactor was scramed, the graphite portions caused a runaway positive void feedback loop at the bottom of the reactor. XE135 vanished, water flashed to steam, and the static graphite moderator caused power levels to reach 200x maximum in a fraction of a second.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Před 28 dny

      The number of control rods may have been within regulation or close to it. Also, INSAG-7 mentions the presence of xenon rather than its disappearance as a factor.

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Před 28 dny

      Xe-235 doesn't "vanish" just because of a modest increase in reactivity over the course of 10-20 seconds. Basically no one in the Soviet Union has ever raised the subject of xenon burnoff as an initiator for the power surge. It is basically fan fiction for Western physicists who didn't do the math. If you like I can link a Spanish study that found the influence of xenon burnoff to be a quite trivial contributor to the power excursion.

    • @adamf663
      @adamf663 Před 27 dny

      @@markusw7833 a runaway reaction's neutrons will change the xe135 into xe136 which isn't a neutron poison. Listen to physicists to understand the physics. Scott Manley has an excellent discussion on the topic.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Před 27 dny

      @@adamf663 What you're repeating is what you saw in the HBO mini-series. Trust me, Scott Manley and Craig Mazin could not research this topic properly and they are no physicists. Scott Manley's video is riddled with errors. People much smarter and more qualified than Scott Manley make demonstrable errors on Chernobyl because their skill sets have not been honed for the deception confounding this topic, and I'm being gracious in phrasing it this way.

    • @adamf663
      @adamf663 Před 27 dny

      @@markusw7833I have fact checked that and educated myself by watching physics lectures. A huge thing HBO got wrong is that xe135 production is delayed due to it being created through a radioactive decay chain. It is created based on reactor activity of 4+ hours prior. The reactor a crash was due to xe135 being created at a 1600mw rate while being burned at a 700mw->500->30>300mw rate. However, it can be burnt in a flash given enough excess neutrons, like would happen in a positive void feedback loop. czcams.com/video/q3d3rzFTrLg/video.htmlsi=GZEye1hGzn97YtF6

  • @dianaholwerda8850
    @dianaholwerda8850 Před 29 dny

    wow, what a video this is amazing.

  • @aluminium5738
    @aluminium5738 Před 29 dny +16

    11:54 PLEASE have mercy on my guy's name lol, it'd be pronounced as "deek"
    be weary of lip-smacking too, stay hydrated

  • @richardgadberry8398
    @richardgadberry8398 Před 27 dny +4

    I'm giving this a score of 3.6 roentgen.

  • @JeramyUdon2827
    @JeramyUdon2827 Před 29 dny +1

    i love your videos :)

  • @marks6663
    @marks6663 Před 7 dny

    Just a correction. It happened at midnight on the 26th. Every new day begins at midnight.

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 Před 7 dny +1

    Not a Thursday, the explosion was on Saturday morning!

  • @chieftainmk_11
    @chieftainmk_11 Před 29 dny +3

    How did you find that image of Boris Stolyarchuk during the time of Chernobyl?
    Every google result is him nowadays or from HBO Chernobyl

  • @Gitfiddle
    @Gitfiddle Před 11 dny

    Swan Lake is a nice touch.

  • @fixedguitar47
    @fixedguitar47 Před 27 dny +1

    Going to have to go do the VR Chernobyl tour again

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Před 27 dny

      Never played it, need to try it out...

    • @fixedguitar47
      @fixedguitar47 Před 27 dny

      @@thatchernobylguy2915 One of the first things I did when I got my headset was the VR guided tour of Chernobyl. I knew I’d never get to go and honestly I’m glad I just did the VR tour. Same with the pyramids. You get about 90% of the experience without any of the headache.

  • @MrLego_Gaming
    @MrLego_Gaming Před 29 dny

    Lets Go he made this video

  • @Timinator257
    @Timinator257 Před 27 dny +8

    Watching this on April 25th, 2024

  • @Bob-yl9pm
    @Bob-yl9pm Před 13 dny

    You NEVER tip your emergency SCRAM control rods with graphite!

  • @Bob-yl9pm
    @Bob-yl9pm Před 13 dny

    “Tickling the sleeping dragon's tail” WTF!

  • @hemfri07
    @hemfri07 Před 29 dny

    Great facts thou

  • @AdamMGTF
    @AdamMGTF Před 17 dny

    Is that swan lake in the background?

  • @ilovecaracals
    @ilovecaracals Před 27 dny

    I waited until today (April 26th 2024) to watch this or else I will have to search for a documentary that I havent watched yet

  • @primerye
    @primerye Před 29 dny +1

    Always wondered why they all wear little caps making them look like they are working in a food preparation facility. Is the equipment so fragile that shed scalp hair would damage the mighty nuclear friggin' reactor machinery?

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Před 29 dny +6

      The caps are to prevent any radioactive particles from getting in their hair and contaminating them. The caps are washed at the end of every shift- the NPP had its own specialised washing department as part of the decontamination workshop. :)

    • @primerye
      @primerye Před 29 dny

      @thatchernobylguy2915 oh wow, thanks for the clarification.

    • @HuNgerforrock
      @HuNgerforrock Před 27 dny +1

      @@thatchernobylguy2915 They had more mustache than hair, they've should protect that with something

  • @Sam-and-colby-edits992
    @Sam-and-colby-edits992 Před 29 dny +1

    Why did it say the 25 instead of the 26

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Před 29 dny +2

      The incident occurred after 1 am on the 26th. On the 25th much of the power reduction and some related events occurred. It provides context.

  • @Dayznology
    @Dayznology Před 29 dny

    Will you ever make a server?

  • @GeneralGayJay
    @GeneralGayJay Před 29 dny

    Stuff usually goes to shit if you have the wrong people.

  • @TestSubjectQWTD
    @TestSubjectQWTD Před 29 dny +1

    Is it just me, or when the Chernobyl control room is in CGI it kinda looks like a TARDIS?

    • @daedalus6433
      @daedalus6433 Před 28 dny

      Well, to be fair, both have lots of buttons and levers that do a lot of things xd

  • @sirnamenloss4791
    @sirnamenloss4791 Před 28 dny +1

    Thank yoiu!!

  • @JJsOriginals
    @JJsOriginals Před 29 dny +5

    Done documentaries, done YT documentaries, done HBO, done shiey... Fuck it, let's find out one more time. 😀

  • @amydamjanovic9183
    @amydamjanovic9183 Před 18 dny

    But wait, a reactor can’t explode!

  • @hansgustavsson7838
    @hansgustavsson7838 Před 27 dny

    Good video but you really need a new mic... damn

  • @SonOfAB_tch2ndClass
    @SonOfAB_tch2ndClass Před 29 dny

    3.6 not great not terrible!

  • @dennisford2000
    @dennisford2000 Před 27 dny

    Dyatlov where have I heard that before….😂

  • @bagofholding
    @bagofholding Před 17 dny

    Remember names? Oh no...is there going to be a test?

  • @garbo7779
    @garbo7779 Před 7 dny

    A RBMK reactor does not explode, you are delirious.

  • @draigporffor3288
    @draigporffor3288 Před 14 dny

    "so remember those names" ... Crap.. i guess ill go back 😅

  • @elenapic6859
    @elenapic6859 Před 27 dny

    so I won't be having friends that are named Dyatlov, or specially leaving them in charge, sorry, too much coincidence

  • @dougyoung349
    @dougyoung349 Před 29 dny +1

    That Chernobyl Guy: Where do you get your information ? Every other film on this event details that they were testing the use of a turbine's output while it is slowing down. They needed to know if they would have enough power to keep the reactor instruments going until the generators come on line. The test had nothing to do with vibration.

    • @danielle3064
      @danielle3064 Před 29 dny

      There are credits at the end of the video. They were performing multiple tests in addition to the generator rundown test

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Před 28 dny

      As Danielle said, there were multiple tests being performed. In my previous video (The Truth About the Rundown) this is touched upon.

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Před 28 dny +2

      Every other film on this event misses critical details.

  • @Arbitrageur_
    @Arbitrageur_ Před 23 dny

    Fuck yeah

  • @dusktilldawny666
    @dusktilldawny666 Před 27 dny

    Could you actually explain what happens in an atom? You know, the usual stuff like P shells and D shells?
    Or even have the slightest comprehension of physics.
    A big ask, I realise.
    But hey, if it makes you some revenue, who am I to complain. .

    • @thatchernobylguy2915
      @thatchernobylguy2915  Před 27 dny

      As in, what happens in an atom during fission? Or just what is an atom?

    • @dusktilldawny666
      @dusktilldawny666 Před 27 dny

      I was thinking more about the weak nuclear force involved, but that's cool, we can discuss fission...

    • @markusw7833
      @markusw7833 Před 27 dny

      You know that not explaining what happens to an atom doesn't invalidate content, right? That, in fact, you don't need to have a clue about P shells or D shells to know much more significant things about the topic you have no clue of?

  • @challengerpat9810
    @challengerpat9810 Před 29 dny +1

    11:54 that guy's name 😂😂😂😂

  • @watonemillion
    @watonemillion Před 15 dny

    Did russia ever pay any reparations for the damage done to other nations, especially the Scandinavian ones?

    • @pavlovezdenetsky7824
      @pavlovezdenetsky7824 Před 13 dny

      What about Ukrainian nation?

    • @MinSredMash
      @MinSredMash Před 10 dny +1

      Legasov's star performance at Vienna successfully quashed efforts to make the USSR pay compensation.

  • @SombraCheeks
    @SombraCheeks Před 26 dny

    I did it im sorry

  • @petergibbons607
    @petergibbons607 Před 19 dny

    how many videos of this do we need? why don't you come up with something unique instead of copying other people's videos?

  • @archivis
    @archivis Před 29 dny

    :)

  • @PoisonOn30Fps
    @PoisonOn30Fps Před 29 dny +1

    Early

  • @hemfri07
    @hemfri07 Před 29 dny

    Let's be serious now,the Reactor Boljsoy Moznosti Kanalni-RBMK,"High powe Channel type Reactor",could operate fine,without aparatchic from polibyro and communist party+wish to be promoted and finaly have toilet paper every friday at home ;) - since i am from eastern europe i know how soviets looked at us from Yugoslavia-we exported goods,to them,and they were happy to get things from Yugoslavia,they were soooooo poor,no meat,no food,no candy,empy store shelfs,but ICBM rockets and military hade to be strong (even they used antique technology from 50's)-tryeing to compete with USA,that was allready in 22 century..hahahaha ☺☺☺

  • @coltonmills5996
    @coltonmills5996 Před 29 dny +1

    It took me seven months in a Roblox game to learn how to blow up a Rbmk 1000 a Lena long time but I was The first one

  • @The_MickLick
    @The_MickLick Před 8 dny

    Not “Keev” it is, as it was then, “Kyiv”

  • @DrEvil814
    @DrEvil814 Před 29 dny

    What is the point of the added noise?
    Lower you noise floor, this video is unwatchable

  • @cmillerg6306
    @cmillerg6306 Před 26 dny

    Please please please delete the highly distracting music. Its a problem with many of your vids

  • @ProgNoizesB
    @ProgNoizesB Před 23 dny

    blablabla.. as if we did not already knew.....
    DISLIKED... you brought nothing new. BYE

  • @moskitt9324
    @moskitt9324 Před 21 dnem

    Chernobyl Guy you will not believe ! I wrote to Oleksandr Kupny a day ago, does he have a photo of Yuriy Trygub? because he played a significant role and there is no photo anywhere. he didn't have a photo and here I see a recent video with a photo of Trigub!!!!!!!! thank you friend !!!