Cities: Skylines

Cities: Skylines

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Realistic Nuclear Power Plant
   
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5.266 MB
10 Jul, 2015 @ 3:43pm
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Realistic Nuclear Power Plant

Description
One thing that had always bothered me was that the nuclear powerplant, Always produced WAAAAY less energy than a real one so after some reseach i found that a nuclear Powerplant With two Core's about 12000 MW Produces But that would be overkill so i brought it down to 3000MW I also Ingreased the scale About 1.5 Times To give it a more realistic feel. Please share your Thought About what i can Realistify Next :)

Maybe subscibe to my youtube channel? :) : www.Youtube.com/ThecraftedMultiverse



Realistic Nuclear Power Plant by The-multiverse
14 Comments
LogicMage3 24 May, 2018 @ 8:24am 
What Vir Modoetiae said. Commercial Nuclear reactors are generally 700 to 1000 MWe per core. The European Pressurized Water Reactor is 1600MWe. A PRISM (fast) reactor is about the right size for the vanilla stats, at 300 MWe per core, and a clear two cores in the plant. At the 'back' of the plant, you can see two 'soda can' like structures. Those are containment cells, with the reactors located at the bottom.
virmodoetiae 16 Apr, 2016 @ 7:11am 
I have no clue where you got the 12000MW figure...if you are referring to net electric power, you would need a 10+ reactor power plant (i.e. a plant which operates 10+ reactors, which does not exists anywhere in the world). The largest power plant in the world is the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant in Japan, it has 7 reactors and outputs almost 8000MW of net electric power.
To keep things realistic, I would suggest setting the power of the Cities:Skylines plant to something between 1500MW and 2000MW, as most plants inthe world output between 750 and 1000MW of net electric power per reactor.
DesertReactor 26 Feb, 2016 @ 6:15am 
@starman, Not all plants. Palo Verde Nuclear Station outside of Phoenix is in the middle of the desert! They utilize the Phoenix metropolitan wastewater treatment plant and enormous draft fans to act as their ultimate heat sink. It's actually very ingenious design, pulling every bit of usable energy from the process.
7@UP 1 Oct, 2015 @ 7:22am 
Excellent nuclear power plant! I suggest 20 000$/week for your power plant,8000$ is too low for 2400mw. 20 000$/week is a lot of money but we can slide the % to use less energy.

Before your power plant i paid 11000$/week,now 5600$.Thanks a lot The-multiverse:steamhappy:
The-multiverse  [author] 22 Sep, 2015 @ 11:25am 
I am currently working on moddeling the Tjernobyl nuclear power plant so stay tuned i gues!:steamhappy:
InuNeko-chan 22 Sep, 2015 @ 10:12am 
3000 MW Is actually fairly realistic for many designs, the 4 reactor Darlington Power Plant where I live in Ontario, Canada produces 3.1 Gigawatts (or 3100 MW) give or take depending on the demands on the plant. What I'd like to see is a nice big modern looking power plant like Darlington to place in one of my cities.
Mr. Dr. Professor Dinkleberg 5 Sep, 2015 @ 10:47pm 
I think it would increase the realism if you require it to be place by water, not roadside. All nuclear power plants are near large bodies of water for cooling... :D
Krahazik 4 Sep, 2015 @ 10:10am 
Should be noted that the actual electricity generating component isn't the reactor core, but turbine generators. The reactores are used as a heat producing element to super heat the liquid medium used to turn the turbines. So power output isn't nessisarilly a matter of cores, but a matter of turbine count and size.

2 core reactor with 1 turbine will produce less power than a 2 core reactor with 3 turbines of the same size.
Diegogmx.UY-Linux- 24 Jul, 2015 @ 5:25pm 
as a matter of fact a 2 core nuclear power plant produces at best 4GWt that is 4 THERMICAL GW, however the actual electricity production is between 30-40% of that
The-multiverse  [author] 23 Jul, 2015 @ 1:07pm 
Thank you all for 450 Downloads :D