New coronavirus in/from China
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- adam2
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From a friend in the armed forces.
A detachment of soldiers, under the command of a few REME officers, have been experimenting with building sturdy but improvised large tents using only standard builders scaffolding and standard large tarpaulins.
Having completed these structures, they camped in them for a few days.
I do not feel it helpful to give the location, but the evolution was in fact viewable from a public right of way, so it cant be that secret.
Purely routine training of course.
A detachment of soldiers, under the command of a few REME officers, have been experimenting with building sturdy but improvised large tents using only standard builders scaffolding and standard large tarpaulins.
Having completed these structures, they camped in them for a few days.
I do not feel it helpful to give the location, but the evolution was in fact viewable from a public right of way, so it cant be that secret.
Purely routine training of course.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- Mean Mr Mustard II
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I can guess MOD stands for ministry of defense and the R in REME stands for Royal but can't place EME??? Royal emergency management engineers doesn't ring a bell.Mean Mr Mustard II wrote:Those lowest MOD bidder cheap Chinese tarps would have been blown to shreds today and are now four miles from that original secret location.
- Mean Mr Mustard II
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vtsnowedin wrote:I can guess MOD stands for ministry of defense and the R in REME stands for Royal but can't place EME??? Royal emergency management engineers doesn't ring a bell.Mean Mr Mustard II wrote:Those lowest MOD bidder cheap Chinese tarps would have been blown to shreds today and are now four miles from that original secret location.
Ministry of Defence, with a C not S.
Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. AKA within the British Army - a fine bunch of cynical chaps -as Rough Engineering Made Easy.
There are other examples such as the ACC (Army Catering Corps) AKA Aldershot Concrete Company. RAOC Royal Army Ordnance Corps (Rag and Oil Company. But they may be history now, possibly all of these specialists were 'subsumed' into the Royal Logistic Corps.
Getting back to the thread - there's a vastly smaller Army to call upon for assistance these days.
- adam2
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REME=Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. Or unofficially "Rough Engineering Made Easy"
MOD=Ministry OF Defence.
Edit, beaten to it. So I will add
MRE=Meal Ready to Eat, or unofficially Meals Rejected by Ethiopians.
MOD=Ministry OF Defence.
Edit, beaten to it. So I will add
MRE=Meal Ready to Eat, or unofficially Meals Rejected by Ethiopians.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
- Mean Mr Mustard II
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Hard to think of a situation where it would be better to accommodate tens of thousands in such structures instead of sports centres, warehouses, event/conference space, agricultural facilities etc.adam2 wrote:...building sturdy but improvised large tents using only standard builders scaffolding and standard large tarpaulins.
This sounds more like a 'team build' exercise.
So what's the current situation?
The rate of increase in the official case count in China has been slowing all week. Reality or limits of testing? Singapore and Thailand, both with relatively high cases don't look to be experiencing explosive growth.
Is China the exception, in that it got out of hand before it was officially acknowledged and respond to? The rest of the world is running 6-8 weeks behind China, but are on high alert so we're unlikely to see similar numbers? Unless it gets a foothold in a poor megacity?
The rate of increase in the official case count in China has been slowing all week. Reality or limits of testing? Singapore and Thailand, both with relatively high cases don't look to be experiencing explosive growth.
Is China the exception, in that it got out of hand before it was officially acknowledged and respond to? The rest of the world is running 6-8 weeks behind China, but are on high alert so we're unlikely to see similar numbers? Unless it gets a foothold in a poor megacity?
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Experience like that of the Super Dome after hurricane Katrina show without planning and pre positioning supplies a sports facility is not a good option. Yes they handle thousands of people but only for an afternoon with all the food etc. coming in just in time and not stored on site. Yes they have a lot of bathrooms but the water supply is usually a municipal system so if the city is without water so is the arena. You could make them good shelters by providing them with their own wells and generators and adding a warehouse for supplies but there is no day to day profit in that.clv101 wrote:Hard to think of a situation where it would be better to accommodate tens of thousands in such structures instead of sports centres, warehouses, event/conference space, agricultural facilities etc.adam2 wrote:...building sturdy but improvised large tents using only standard builders scaffolding and standard large tarpaulins.
This sounds more like a 'team build' exercise.
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I think the advantage tents have is the ability to limit the population in each tent and isolate infected people from those not yet tested or presenting symptoms .clv101 wrote:Don't all those issues equally exist for ad hoc tents in a field? Instead building tents from scaffolding and tarps, wouldn't it be better to improve the water, waste, food, power etc of existing structures?
Also you can set them up on any flat area and have all the floor space usable for beds. Most arenas have a lot of the space taken up by bleacher seating which cant hold a cot. If the supply issues are addressed perhaps a arena surrounded by tents in the parking lots would be a workable solution. At any rate if we get hit by massive numbers of cases the hospitals will run out of beds and bed space in just a few days and the authorities will need to do the best they can for the overflow.
- adam2
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Tents are cheap and can be erected with plenty of fresh air between them, a large existing building might promote infection spread.
Large buildings are often reliant on complex and power hungry, heating, lighting and ventilating systems.
A tent is naturally ventilated, can be lit by a couple of 40 watt bulbs, and heated with a propane heater.
Large buildings are often reliant on complex and power hungry, heating, lighting and ventilating systems.
A tent is naturally ventilated, can be lit by a couple of 40 watt bulbs, and heated with a propane heater.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
Health Secretary declares coronavirus a serious and immediate danger, and announces enforced quarantine powers.
The Brighton case appears to be a superspreader so chances of cases in Brighton are high
Edit
On another forum report that 4 more cases have been confirmed in Brighton. Hence the public warning and control measures. Not seen the original report.
The cat is out of the bag.
The Brighton case appears to be a superspreader so chances of cases in Brighton are high
Edit
On another forum report that 4 more cases have been confirmed in Brighton. Hence the public warning and control measures. Not seen the original report.
The cat is out of the bag.
Last edited by PS_RalphW on 10 Feb 2020, 10:22, edited 1 time in total.
- UndercoverElephant
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Not sure it makes much difference, given that if the increase is slowing then it is due to a lockdown policy that is itself totally unsustainable.clv101 wrote:So what's the current situation?
The rate of increase in the official case count in China has been slowing all week. Reality or limits of testing?
Insufficient data.Is China the exception, in that it got out of hand before it was officially acknowledged and respond to? The rest of the world is running 6-8 weeks behind China, but are on high alert so we're unlikely to see similar numbers? Unless it gets a foothold in a poor megacity?