ML20086T910
| ML20086T910 | |
| Person / Time | |
|---|---|
| Site: | Vogtle |
| Issue date: | 06/01/1995 |
| From: | Joiner J GEORGIA POWER CO. |
| To: | |
| Shared Package | |
| ML20086T912 | List: |
| References | |
| OLA-3-A-055, OLA-3-A-55, NUDOCS 9508030197 | |
| Download: ML20086T910 (21) | |
Text
{{#Wiki_filter:_ Ys p pgpf $lpy hW5 7 h April 13, ' UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Before the Atomic Safety and Licensino Boar 4 0FFICE OF SECRETARY-DOCKETING & SERVICE - BRANCH ) In the Matter of ) Docket Nos. 50-424-OLA-3 ) 50-425-OLA-3 GEORGIA POWER COMPANY, ) et al. ) Re: License ";endment ) (Transfer to Southern (Vogtle Electric Generating ) Nuclear) Plant, Units 1 and 2) ) ) ASLBP No. 93-671-01-OLA-3 CORRECTION TO GEORGIA POWER COMPANY'S LIST OF EXHIBITS RELATED TO THE DIESEL GENERATOR REPORTING ISSUE Georgia Power Company's List of Exhibits Related to the Diesel Generator Issue and the Supplemental Testimony of George Bockhold, Jr., on Diesel Generator Air Quality, served on the parties'on April 3, 1995, inadvertently. included as an exhibit the wrong. version for the partial Tape 41 Transcript (GPC Exhibit. 55; Bockhold Exhibit I). Georgia Power intended to use as its exhibit, and has enclosed, the same transcript that Georgia Power submitted to the parties on March 23, 1995, in response'to the NRC Staff's February 22, 1995, stipulation request.I' The Tape 41 Transcript has been copied numerous times and each of the parties has made hand-marked corrections to the same transcript. As a result, the transcript has become very difficult to read. To remedy this potential difficulty for the l' Egg Georgia Power Company's letter to Mitzi A. Young, Esq., f' dated March 23, 1995. i h o 1
t e ]7 ' #C. 1 Board, Georgia-Power has retyped this transcript for the parties, incorporating the proposed changes. This' retyped-transcript is .also enclosed and is labelled GPC Exhibit.55A, Bockhold Exhibit' j I-1.- l Respectfully submitted, J%rthes E. JoinerL/ [ John Lamberski i l TROUTMAN SANDERS Suite 5200 600 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta, GA 30308-2216 (404) 885-3360 Ernest L. Blake David R. Lewis SHAW, PITTMAN, POTTS & TROWBRIDGE 2300 N Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20337 (202) 663-8084 Counsel for Georgia Power Company Dated: April 13, 1995
m sii j") WI i UNITED STATES OF AMERICA i NUCLEAR REGULATORY-COMMISSION j Before the-Atomic Safety and Licensina Board )
- In the Matter of'
) Docket Nos. 50-424-OLA-3 0 ) 50-425-OLA-3 GEORGIA POWER COMPANY, .) - et al.. -) Re: License Amendment I -) (Transfer to Southern (Vogtle Electric Generating ) Nuclear)- .l Plant, Units 1 and 2) ) ) ASLBP No. 93-671-01-OLA-3 J t-CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of Correction to Georgia Power Company's List of Exhibits Related To The Diesel Generator Reporting Issue dated March 1, 1995, was served by express mail upon the persons listed on the attached service list, this 13th; day of April, 1995. 'LSRhdB i Thomas L. Penland,,Jrf l
Wy 14-7, q - UNITED STATES OF-AMERICA ~ NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION - , BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the' Matter of. I Docket Nos.' 50424-OLA-3l h GEORGIA POWER COMPANY,' - stal. 50-425-OLA-3 (Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Re: License Amendment Units 1 and 2) . (Transfer to Southern Nuclear). ASLBP No. 93-671-01-OLA-3 ' SERVICE LIST Administrative Judge Stewart D. Ebneter ~ Peter B. Bloch, Chairman Regional Administrator
- Atomic Safety and Licensing Board USNRC, Region II U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Suite 2900 4 Two White Flint North 101 Marietta Street,~ N.W.
11545 Rockville Pike Atlanta, GA 30303' C Rockville, MD 20852 Administrative Judge James H. Carpenter Office of the Secretary Atomic Safety and Licensing Board U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 933 Green Point Drive A*ITN: Docketing and Services Branch Oyster Point Washington, D.C. 20555 - Sunset Beach, NC ' 28468 Administrative Judge Thomas D. Murphy Charles Barth, Esq. Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Mitzi Young,- Esq. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of General Counsel Two White Flint North U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 11545 Rockville Pike One White Flint North Rockville, MD 20852 Stop 15B18-Rockville, MD 20555 - Michael D. Kohn, Esq. Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto, P.C. Director, Environmental Protection '517 Florida Avenue, N.W. Division
- Washington, D.C 20001 Department of Natural Resources Suite 1252, 205 Butler Street, S.E.
Office of Commission Appellate Atlanta, GA '9334 Adjudication - One White Flint North 11555 Rockville Pike Rockville, MD 20852
h el c A.1,,p u,- Top. 41 cPC EZHIBIT 55 BOCKHOI.D EI. I (Replacement) 40 1 (inaudible)? 2 VOICE: Eight a.m. 3 VOICE: (Inaudible). h VOICE: Whatever yesterday's mode 4 4 ALme 5 1 projection is (inaudible). 6 VOICE: Eut (inaudible) saturday q l 7 night at eight o' clock. [s b VOICE: We here showing three-a 9 o' clock Tuesday (inaudible) yesterday. 6 VOICE: Three 10 vos @>A o' clock Tuesday. (J a = "' ' ' ' p" c to le y %. a i 11 -wa=*'" ^ ^ ^ ' - ' i - " N d' -T ' -g 12 That's my projection. 13 VOICE: Mode 2 (inaudible). 14 VOICE: Okay. (Inaudible) mode 4. 15 hD VOICE: (Inaudib . N"* D 16 VOICE: Okay. (Inaudible) we 17 don't need to worry about (inaudible). 18 VOICE: (Inaudible) engineers 19 (inaudible). 20 VOICE: (Inaudible). 21 VOICE: I's. leaving, I just ^ 22 (inaudible). $r., def 5 23 [r0 VOICE: (Inaudible). m .,4/ me 24 wy VOICE: (Inaudible) read a N @ ible) 25 paragraph. ' I r. :. ' has reviewed air g t _f SS 17.c4 I /
5 f 1 1I,4, i g ti w 1g a: 9i s s 8oo .g. 3 3 s s' a % l) = h8 y ~A m q, g,,. Q, _ g-y e 4x5aafila! i it
). f y 1, 1 g pp 41 1 quality of the diesel generator focusing on ihr /4 l @'* J T N *** > 2 r s h 41=: dilq s_ 2 _.. g owpoint control thd has l d l y 3 concluded that air quality is satisfactory.h0 /4 Initial reports-o h e 5 expected dowpoints later ( i--"d i h 1 a L. 6 That specific was in reference 7 to ths March 29, March _30, and March 31 work 8 order associated with the instruments that we 9 later determine $v d w bad, and we g o t +e-OJ., / VC. fvw > M* i++ ~ h V 10 (inaudible) eer: :. .T. ; r and we figured out l11 (in$$$C instrumentation.Oh,. how to work the audible) 12 This was confirmed by an internal nGVrwt W 13 inspection of one (inaudible) on April 6, / w LWe3 V 14 1990. ( 2..e o d i b l+ ) loo d .Ln t and[found a ( i n t " f_,i h i : 4 o f h) here A .//., f V 15 light o and .found some [ 16 minor corroston on.(inaudible) el:g D /a[$ /4e Mt S
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- N iodically lac control 17 is air filters were done in March, 1990.
From 19 all reports that I've heard on that is that 3 20 those air filters were always clean. Even in 21 the previous outage they were very clean and-22 practically brand new. 23 Me showed no indication of corrosion 24 and air aceiver and daily air receiver. blowhadde) 25 ( i n = " d i _' _ e ) showed no indication of c o r'r o s i o n j i
v i 42 1 and daily air receiver blow down with no i 2 significant water discharge. gggQ We'believe, although b irc t: Iled 3 4 is checking, is ever since we started up 5 we've been doing daily air receiver blowdowns 6 as part of operations. 4 g Mg 7 Further, I guess, ('n fi'?^) when 8 the air quality cast up, spoke to the cooper (em ( i 90er-9 people. And the '2 f i ' i r) reaction W (.} van)....,J..M,e) 10 if you do these daily blowdowns, 11 and you don't have a air receiver full of / d40e M V 12 water, because of thag(in :dibi ) marine A 13 engines and because you have a pressure 14 reduction going to the controls,.you really 4 15 don't have to worr about air quality. [ 16 fu that[y: e th word 25: J L :! n -- 4 L-
- _f' 't MJ y !
/ 17 =m i - - r n o ( in a u e r e i w)jyou know, y 1 ^). i 18 That was the flavor that emme to me, okay. [ 19 We've done u o e additional 20 research. We %v 3(inaudib1 ) '88 e, time Lame- [21 -well, we ha ('-- '-) p r o g r a m,et-y 4 ./ $h v22 working out (inaudi(le).wh sf ((inaudible) program 1 W I.%ffd) 23 24 The '88 time frame from like 5/10/88 25 to 5/2/89, somewhere in that time f r a m e,'
43 i 1 approximately a year ago, the year before 2 that, we may have'had one or more of the' 3 dryers out of service for several months, 4 okay, and that's indicated here. 5 We probably were not doing good PM's 6 on chegki:4g dryer quality at that particular 5%:ert r* E ~r Y 7 (1studitM), okay. 8 I gu a my question to the group is 1 \\ -9 war that h (dne dasaw-) the statement that we 10 made in our letter at all? 11 Is the other facts, the fact that. /12 lJrY 4k (inaudible) blev do,wg tJ,.e air drye the fact e-. 13 thei des."i- (inaudible) dryer, the 14 fact that essentially a yepr or approximately AAr*4N I 15 a year before the sal de + {k audibAe Q wkV &)you know, w I 1 leesd /M5 t'**' 17 fna u d ibl a) 16 did have d net. sully (incudihie) h d g*d i b.. }, etzt:4 W It / vi7 (in__
- t :f gg 18 M ed>C**I VOIC E :
The stion I n d qt &gg -Hokw ww e .- 4. 5 19 answer first,T'incedik *)4]I tke w a i s ij @8 s / W Ionkre@)Wf.hd 7 e" 20 ^;; k i.. the right way. (. = c e d i v_"M Q1 1hese a b djo0M ) i s 21 evente(rt, twelve, twent two, yOu Lev. / j l R j0T A GE V22 (i..eucible,(10 CfP. k.;;;ic:, (1000dible} 3 h VOICE: 24 That's theoretically not 25 possible.
,1 j 'r 44 1 hj) -VOICE: I mean, what we've got to 2 basically say is our PM program before, I 3 don't know -- /**) 4 VOICE: June, July, '89; right 5 69 VOICE: Yeah, somewhere 6 /sdW1 VOICE: (Inaudible) '89. [p'h VOICE: Yeah, somewhere in that 7 8 time frame i our PM program was suspect.
- Okay, 9
the readings were suspect. You know, that 10 doesn't mean that you did have good air, but 11 it doesn't mean that you didn't have good air. 12 We don't know if we had good air or bad air, 13 okay. ) 14 But in the meantime we did pull the 15 filter, okay, a'nd we,had been doing the 16 blowdowns and a'l l af that impJies thpt $4e My PT> r'In9K 9f T!'n f 17 air, although it may nog demonstrate i 18 da="'-) the'best quality, was 19 satisfactory. 20 M# 4%Y VOICE: (Inaudible y,ou can't y ej lhe tPn3 21 that we have a bad air and (-i n.. a. 1 1 ) because 22 anytime you've got a minor corrosion, you can 23 see anytime (inaudible). 4 h]f VOICE: You know, I guess I would 24 25 tend to believe that we had good air b a s'a d 4
b ,g c ?. r, 45 1 upon two things; one, pulling the aiy filter / V2 and inspecting it, which was -(in.;% )e4 4 d_bl. new. / (k...iO M &. V3 We didn't see any buildups of i .ea.12, 4 The second thing I guess I would /5 Eyc4 O youknow,{two$undredpad tend to believe, h k h NY3 dV /6 fiftypoundf](inndibl.Iorthereaboutsand ) 7 kind of room t eig pa ra tju r e, tktm3 d nd okay a your [ttjti to d d r y e r} g.n d i{_y st and LT Mi /4 1: P an a pansion process, even 9 if you didn't have a dryer, iti gges,tprsugh an M w/ 4(4 seu c.!WQ (i(...uuil.)[fnmy 10 expansion process, the u 11 opinion. M M EM 6 hMM) [12 You know,[g: f two h ndred and s 13 fifty poun a or two hundred arid ten otnds Itthelamtt L. It p A 6 drkr, Se OR A [14 I Jinewdib1:, sixty pounds lin:;.;d.bi: dry air. Mfek5 sa\\as 15 so I would then conclude, if my am Ma 16 logic i co ect, I yould conclude that -(in JM / rvn Pr ""H3 JorO vi7 ^1^
- y air qualitFis still a valid
,,E. x..... h. k... f,.' Y b. l1. 3 w /, ,) -s 19 VOICE: (Inaudible). em r~ -g-r_ .o hvp4cE.: 'Nes. You know, 20 yor w$ Ih 4-14 c d i b.f;;*6 k erra- (12:cdibi-) - $: 21 w= this 22 generic letter and stated what our air 23 quality was. [* * (Mr M \\/2 5
- m.in.w 4JlZ'a$$%*h*b1V, 'jflp *','
quality (- w u d i b l e fj v o g e l a e u d 151;) - s y s t e a[
' g, har si 1 Mt 'sen established % fifty de p r es u a.. - -.. A_, W ? $ W r===ws D _.__ _ /2 rs ~ ' wm 3-That's what we~ said our requirements are. 4 Dewpoint criteria we e s ta blis he d i 4*e di6 da.4-Jy> % N based on a' design capability t..;ucib1 ]and i a minimumdieselgenerator[ir"E Y" 6 7 So basically we saig th t our i / d e gr e e. f ' i..;-. i b l e,.e g.v.4 Wet I v-dT ta Vs criteria is fifty s 'fTowS9 s4*+ w P 'I I1 l4**f$hi I h VOICE: 9 Yeah VOICE:, A, # (inaudible). f aa~/ w.w,4 A w- \\/10 6j,p Finauu o,. n,. - u @~'.,A.d e m o n s t r a t e ) t 1 ssmi 1 per ically. y question really focuses n (fE_Ydi 2 this
- )-letter and how long -- you 13 know, I believe from what I've heard from all 14 the experts that Item 4 here is still valid.
15 I mean, we believe that we've had 16 satisfactory quality air going to the control 17 system. 18 M OICE: Yes, I think that because t h e [( ina u /ww'.dhs ll{b 19 dible) 20 (p3 VOICE: Given the fact you Q).Mes da ak, t h a t / olrier. V21 have an expansion process. h -t h ; dry +e. A /M VOICE: Agnin, George, I say, you 22 23 know, it depends on whht you're going to call 24 satisfactory. 25 If you're going to say satist'ctory a I gr-y w mm w e-w +
7WCNT prove tnt _. sfahed, f i f. AosEM6B ' h'e 30[ hkutt b { M sMemed d bkt j ha&d 'on Okt ObstNatioO bd 47 1 is what we said in response to7he generic l l 2 letter, I'a~not sure that we can show that 3 we've met that criteria. 4 The problem is that you can't tell l t 5 what any of these numbers are because the way 6 the PM's done, you just can't tell. 8 I 7 i You know, there's a number down i Tbtf 8 here, but there's no calculation. gee *'re 1 9 doing the measurements at atmospheric 10 pressure, yet they need to be-corrected back ) ' /11 sys5 m pressure, to a you kn and we're 12 getting high numbers. [13 k
- YO!Cy "i... tanmuuasses 4.
u -; - l e' . 4 Mm_ _ yf/L.4 g14 kap r *, M, M. .3. ! m. ... gans - e h VOICE: We Y 15 ve made engineering ~"V"-{ 16 judgments, okay, on this particular statement. l 17 I would go ahead and d**1 VOICE: You know, we're saying 8 no 19 there's 1nternal corrosion that we're' 1 3 20 observing, therefore air quality is met and { relahlblc 21 that may or may not be h iir.e;dible'. ^ NY Vo//E: n
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'itl-you can see 7n awi eu. w.4 g g p,,, mg ag ph VOICE: (I-7.eedibl y based on our 24 4, wh.n we w3PM three ti.'.s 3.dg..nt i a t i l
j 48 1 day-and o erations says based on what we've-h bNT f Y W M 'bM 2 see (ina ible)j no c o rr'6s i o n, we have to say (inaudI5 d N k/* h 3 ~ N PToICE: T 4 u i l e' p 4 g) (* Wds'/ g,(-Ine W recent p 5 g Tis 4 M VOICE: 4 6 requests, George, for all these work orders, 7 okay. They've asked for all-these GE VOICE: 4 I H T %.think at-ten o' clock 9 I'11; talk to f4aa d i;.,l d about going-back on 10 our past work orders in our PM program'in '88 11 was not as good as our PM program h a been in 2 the past year, basically, in '89/g ing to '90, A inf ormation. F5 shh 13 and we'll provide that h our 14 engineering judgment that we had satisfactory 15 air quality I think that's 6 b GIC .The expansion of air from 17 receiver pressure to eighty pounds is going to 18 result in about an eighty degree depression of 19 dowpoint pardon me, thirty degree 20 depression at dowpoint. 21 VOICE: (Inaudible). ~ i 22 VOICE: Yeah. j 23 VOICE: Yeah. [24 osk k0:0 so the receiver -- \\d 5 %6 h;IC The absolute worst case
x 49 1 would be water laying in the bottom of the 2 tank on a hot day, you'd have had, what, a 3 ninety degree dowpoint or so. /N voice: 4 okay. The other thing i. 5 that happens with a systen like that is 6 normally your receiver temperature is elevated 7 when your comp ~ressors are operating because of 8 the heat, but a ninety or a hundred would be a 9 good number. ,;9 h[ MM voice But h n;;dihie[] or o such a 11 long time. od Q 02 2 That would only be a short 3 period g (i..eadi 14 gg@g) keI[z : 4 Yeah. 15 M V ice I think that's probably a d6 goodkin udi point. ~ N N VOICE: 17 You get about thirty kr % souW 18 degree depression of a dowpoint H. n e ;41 e-l e) so whatever we h na$'s**M ] the [.it k 9 vaasas)y maximum eceiver 20 was, we're sure had &e thirty degrees lower k $he C 21 thetr ( i n a ** d i b l e t. j- [d yW Y V22 $ voIcts (I... 01:1.f inety degrees 23 in that room and that room would never, 24 actually never rapidly, fall to sixty degrees. 8 h VOICE: 25 The ISA standard was bkW l
4 50 1 twenty -- how many degrees below room 2 temperature? VI fh#h0V01CE: Eighteen degrees. A /pS VOICE: Eighteen degrees. so we 4 5 always are going thirty, which is more than 6 eighteen. %n} /7 VOICE: Okay. So we believe [ 8 we had good air quality and a poor PM program 9 in '88 and we fixed that. 10 8 TIE VOICE: The PM. program needs some il minor tuning up now. gg hn-V 2 ghuy VOICE: (Inaudible) needs to-be 13 done now. ]4 Mk I: Oh, yeah, I. agree. 15 VOICE: (Inaudible). hh VOICE: Oh, yeah, we flapped 16 17 around with the fact that-we got a, you know, a ;i. r.g>' C ro" 18 on the 29th or so we got ing and \\/19 nobody knew about it unti kjf. :diblef picked 20 it up. [4 21 VOICE: George, we ht bad i yd 2 reading today. s qxty, degrees (in: dible) on A dic)6 8 23 the two (1 e n d i bla ) _d:;p eir ';dirp( fyi...g1 j24 6. fVOICE: .ibi;;j I think we're 25 working on the problem; isn't that right? j 1
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[2 thi k 8-i,Yh # A 3 VOICE: (Inaudible). // L kNAr'n+ 9'Y 4 ffMM VOICE: -i snann we got,,A good [5 readingf )(i... diblei. [CedlAT /6 N VOICE: Not on 2A, 25. /r M I VOICE: 2A it g g/ d hh VOICE: b e oc with A w e.y. 4 A a v e' - blu +i.e,( h.C dwo 9 operations and do VOICE: d__ 11 [rh VOICE: Okay. When' I heard about-12 it, and I heard about it yesterday or so or 13 the day before yesterday -- actuall I heard M M8C 644 14 about it just before the meeting (j=="fi51-). 15 He mentioned there was a possibility 16 and they finally took the reading and I'got' 17 the informati j s b fore they finally took 18 the reading (inaudible) and I think it was 19 sixty degrees at that point. f44(M.. N T Y l $ $ Y 20
- u d i ' ' al,.Jee, s o m dy n
di operations to go ahead and 17.e 4151 hggl k h VOICE: For PM program Oebalr M I 22 I 23 improvement, the PM cur {enti sa a to use a J N Y/ VM neuui;,10,) natrument 24 pressure regulator and 25 the instrument manual says that you should not i
m ~ l G b M4 N
- b khb b
~ g %kh d a M .bM' g g g, quA Ap NO an I wwd wh h xy J$$$[ wad &a4*f8M C fG N 5N' y % & f) 0 & use a pressure r gulator. Ii: should be a 2 needle valve. at-needs to be changed. dAl)- !3 M s VOICE: linayQig yp
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) (inindib}e N 9 oICE: T ~" ~' VOICE: a$1 6 $$ VOICHT I'1 e a note to (( } p(ina
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l / M VOICE: g_ a And the reading for 9 (inaudible the r ad ng at a sp a g., 10
- pressure, u...uuiL1-3 at atmospheric presgure go-(in( daudible) 11 and then they wouldn't have to 12 back to receiver pressure every time they did 13 it with, you know, chance for error and not 14 knowing how they do it.
drekrefVOICE: (Inaudible) make that 15 16 error. 7 TeICE (Inaudible). is "I VOICE: They give the readings and 19 they get the temperature, you know. They 20 just (inaudible). 21 VOICE: Yeah. 22 k VOICE: And they go back to try-to 23 correct that one [Mh VOICE: So we're going to end up 24 25 with an acceptance dewpoint of like minus
~' ti 53 1 five degrees or something atmosphere. ,,S 7;;;;;! (Inaudible) AAL Y 58Y h M That's right. I [ VOICE: Well,'th fprocedure 5 doesn't tell them how to correct it. It just 6 says to correct it, so we don't know how 7 they're doing it. 8 ""A' Yeah ML4p VOICE: -f. g I just thi.." L: peri +i r; o 4 ^ n "c =A #Fh:.;41^ 1E t & % o h a v e dteMavrite the r =a m \\/11 . nandt5le) and make sure ther (inaudible). 12 VOICE: (Inaudible). N Document control. 14 VOICE: (Inaudible). 15 VOICE: The one they had out the 16 in field the other. day was an unapproved copy. 17 VOICE: (Inaudible). 18 VOICE: (Inaudible) equipment 19 (inaudible). 20 W VOICE: The PM program. 21 VOICE: Right. 22 VOICE: (Inaudible) or region 23 nuuber, what's that number? 24 VOICE: (Inaudible) just got a 25 message (inaudible). m
r( 1 54 N{1 /1" VOICE: The conclusion that I can 2 draw, George, is that I think that we'know 3 we've had compressors that -- dryers out of 4 service for a long-period of time. 5 Kenny says that we have continued at 6' times to run the compressors even though the i 7 dryers are out.of service, and I believe that a when you do that, you have a condition like 9 you have'right now on 2A and you'll and up 10. with, you know, sixty degree or so dowpoint, 11 okay. 12 And we have operated that way, okay, 13 and I think there's an operating history like 14 that, and I think having operated that way in 15 the past, you know, I don't think we can say 16 we've always. net the statements on air quality 17 that we have in the FSAR. 18 on the other hand'what we're saying 19 is that we have inspected the receiver and 20 we've inspected the filters and from the 21 extent of that inspection, we have not 22 detected a corrosion problem, and I think 23 that's about as much as we can conclude. hh 24 VOICE I think we can add that, 25 you know, the thirty degree dowpoint drop ) 1 ~q n .,---a
g[, nW/ J7 g/dylv.> v.> 55 e 1 (la-"'ihle) designed-t: fi't. satisfactory (in=r,_h,0ms-beam *i skl ts.] O
- T" 2
air .. ;)j s%sociated with that. h VOICE: 3 I think you have an actual 4 case right here right now.on 2A. [M VOICE: That's sixt degrees (,ML ~' VO Ob-( ible [ h VOICE: 7 You would meet the ./ F _9 Va requirements of sixty degrees OA g 3 9 (4 L I r.;;' ii 4~Oh 8k) h VOICE: 10 If you postulate the dryer 11 being out for a long period of time in the-12 summer and the room getting to ninety -- I 13 guess design maximum the room is like ninety-14 eight. "gh 5 VOICE: You've got to look over /16 "ts. re,, w s 6 of time y h% VOICE: Yeah. pp VOICE: I mean, when you do the 18 19 bubble test, you're bubbling moist air down 20 the line. You know, that's for a short period 21 of time. You've got saturated air' going 22 through the control. That's what the 23 manufacturer is using, but short periods of 24 time is not a problem. 5 Q VOICE: Yeah. c i
p .v. ?. 56 .b] The pr b e is h you get water down the line 22ndi51e) corrodes. k VOICE: C;s s ;;i g r.. Chirk NRd VOICE That's b tablem. 5 88 VOICE: okay. N 6 VOICE: I'll talk to the [inerdibi;]about 7 this. (.48] YeIc!: I appreciate it, folks. 9 I'll pass (inaudible). 10 VOICE: (Inaudible). hh VOICE: I'll pass this on to 11 12 Harvey and make sure (inaudible) PM. 13 VOIC : Yeah. ( Igr'a u d i D 1 e ). / / / 14 VO E: Do you have any commen,ts 15 t incorpor to in it? / j 16 VOICE: .I ne'ed somebody tcy/ walk me / / 17 through that p r o c e d u r e'. / 8 VOICE: kill. / 19 VOICE: j (In a u d ib le ),/ Y ou wa n t,t'b h e a r 20 VOICE / the. hole 21 ing? 22 VO CE: Yeah,' I want to bar the 23 whole thin 2 [ VOICE: Y u got a few minutes? 25 VOICE: I got a few minutes. l 1 i -..,}}