Given they’re frozen by being immersed in liquid nitrogen, how do these refrigeration failures happen? They don’t require electricity, just someone to top it up occasionally.
Sometimes the liquid nitrogen lines to the pods fail, sometimes you get a prolonged power outage, sometimes there’s a leak in the pods themselves that allows coolant to evaporate, etc.
Not sure why you’re being downvoted. You’re correct, the insulation keeps it at its temperature. External refrigeration is not used (well not commonly, as far as I know).
Given they’re frozen by being immersed in liquid nitrogen, how do these refrigeration failures happen? They don’t require electricity, just someone to top it up occasionally.
Sometimes the liquid nitrogen lines to the pods fail, sometimes you get a prolonged power outage, sometimes there’s a leak in the pods themselves that allows coolant to evaporate, etc.
you don’t really need electricity, you just need to occassinally fill the tanks up
With liquid nitrogen, which needs to stay refrigerated to remain liquid.
This is incorrect it needs insulation
Not sure why you’re being downvoted. You’re correct, the insulation keeps it at its temperature. External refrigeration is not used (well not commonly, as far as I know).
Because people are ignorant fools mostly