P6 Disaster Bomb Shelter

 

 

 

 

 

COMPLETELY SELF-CONTAINED PROTECTION FROM

 

·Structural Fiberglass Paraboloid ·Tornadoes

·Air Filtration System ·Nuclear Weapons

·Toilet, Shower and Septic System ·Chemical Weapons/Accidents

·Battery Operated ·Nuclear Power Plant Accidents

·Decontamination ·Nuclear/Chemical Terrorism

·Communications System ·Power Plant Failures

·Lighting ·Forest Fires and Famines

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

P6 underground bombshelter exterior drawing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

P6 underground bomb shelter interior drawing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE P6 DISASTER SHELTER

The P6 is a totally self-contained 20-150 psi ribbed paraboloid (egg shape) underground disaster shelter designed to protect 6 adults for long periods or 10 people for short durations such as during tornadoes. The product was specifically designed and developed to protect people during and after disasters such as tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, storms, forest fires, power failures, nuclear power plant accidents, nuclear or chemical terrorism, and full-scale protracted nuclear, chemical and biological war. A tremendous effort has been made to think of every conceivable incident that shelterists could face in the P6 shelter. Many geometrical shapes were experimented with before finalizing the P6. The P6 includes the fiberglass paraboloid structure, fiberglass entranceway, fiberglass/composite hatch, HEPA filter, 45 gallon fiberglass septic tank, 500 gallon fiberglass water tank, fiberglass center floor beam, fiberglass counter, fiberglass shower wall, fiberglass battery housing, MCAS air filtration system, toilet, floor, sixteen 12- volt deep cycle batteries, air blower, fiberglass gray water tank, all wiring, all plumbing, etc. The P6 requires approximately 3 man-hours hours to connect the entranceway and water tank.

 

DESIGN

The P6 is a third generation disaster shelter designed and developed by Walton W. McCarthy, M.E., author of PRINCIPLES of PROTECTION, U.S. Handbook of NBC Weapon Fundamentals and Shelter Engineering Standards, which is the United State’s bible on shelter engineering. He is the chief engineer of RADIUS ENGINEERING INC., with over 29 years experience design­ing “high- tech” disaster shelters. The book is dis­tributed by The American Civil Defense Associa­tion (TACDA) in Draper, UT and is known in the industry as P.O.P. The P6 was designed using CAD (computer aided drafting), CAE (computer aided engineer­ing), and FEAM (3-dimensional finite element analysis and modeling). A shelterist in the P6 under heavy, direct effects from two 1-MT nuclear weapons, has at least the same probability of survival (99.7%) as a person living and working in peace­time. The paraboloid shape of the P6 allows it to be a true pressure vessel for resistance to high external pressure. The P6 shelter system is a third generation design and is based on 20 years field experience with McCarthy’s successful TBC6, ES10 and larger sister, the P6 fiberglass underground shelters. The P6 is much easier to enter and exit with its straight-in entranceway. The hatch at ground level of the P6 is available in several different levels of threat resistance.

 

 

 

ENTRANCEWAY

The geometry of the P6 allows the much preferred off-set entranceway. This has the advantage of extremely quick and easy entry plus it provides the most efficient escape for moisture and heat. The entranceway also contains the MCAS air filtration system where it can be accessed and serviced.

 

SHELTER CONSTRUCTION

The paraboloid shelter and entranceway are made of structural fiber­glass manufactured to underground storage tank standards of Underwriters Laboratory, American Society of Testing and Materials, and shelter engineering standards of PRINCIPLES of PRO­TECTION. Fiberglass was chosen as the optimum material because of its extremely high resiliency and corrosion resistance plus its ability to be shaped into a compoundly curved structure. The 40 psi (pounds per square inch) external pressure resistance, with no earth arching, is constant over 100 years and does not have to be de-rated like steel each passing year due to corrosion. Fiberglass also forms a complete vapor barrier which provides a dry atmosphere when placed below ground, and it has proven to be sound in the underground storage tank industries. In addition, one of the greatest characteristics of fiberglass is its ability to “remain intact” if overstressed. The inside of the shelter is smooth, curved, and white to create maximum brightness with minimal light. All of these facilities function without outside electricity through the use of 12-volt, deep-cycle sealed batteries. The inside surface is easily cleaned with common detergents and is easily repaired.

 

LEACHING SEPTIC TANK

Opposite the MCAS pocket in the entranceway is the 45-gallon fiberglass leach­ing septic tank designed into the entranceway. The septic tank has a duration of 3-6 months depending on the number of shelterists and diet. It is easily pumped out with a manual septic pump from the ground surface by removing the septic tank cover.

SHELTER FACILITIES

The P6 contains 800 cubic feet (6000 gal) with headroom from 6’-4” to 8’-4”. This allows for normal living and a very spacious feeling. There is ample light for reading anywhere in the shelter supplied by LED white lights located on the ceiling of the shower housing. Fresh filtered air is brought into the shelter by a 12-volt 40,000-hour air blower inside the MCAS air filter housing and is designed to operate 24 hours per day for approximately 30 days and supplies many times the breathing volume of air required by adults. This system has the advantage of maintaining constant shelter temperature, constant shelter oxygen levels, constant shelter carbon dioxide levels, and constant shelter mois­ture levels, plus it prevents overheating which is common with manual air blowers in warm cli­mates. Exhausting of hot, moist, spent air is facilitated through the entranceway which is located on the end of the shelter but very close to the highest point of the ceiling. The hot, moist, spent air rises up through the entranceway to the vent at the top of the entranceway where it exits the shelter. This is the most efficient geometry for exhausting, spent air especially when power consumption is critical. Sixteen 12-volt deep-cycle sealed batteries are stored in a fiberglass battery box under the floor. The normal loss of battery power is approximately 1.5% per month. A photovoltaic panel (solar panel) can be used to maintain the batteries if desired. A 50-foot battery charg­ing cable can also be connected from the batteries in the shelter to the battery in a car to allow the car alternator to charge the batteries.

 

MCAS Multi-Chamber Air Filtration System

1.       Contaminated air enters the air intake hole on the elliptical hatch dome. It then travels around under the hatch dome where the air velocity slows allowing rain and heavy particles to fall out.

2.       Contaminated air then travels into the vertical pipe under the hatch dome and past the ball valve.

3.       The contaminated air then travels into the stainless steel micronic washable screen/pre-filter removing more of the heavier particles.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.       The air then travels into the Gas Agent Test Housing where the air can be tested using the M256A chemical agent test kit. A 4 inch white pipe plug is removed to insert the test kit.

 

HEPA/Filter Sleeve

5.       The contaminated air then travels into the core of the HEPA/Carbon filter designed to remove 99.99% of particles that are 0.3 u (microns) and larger. This is where the carriers of biological warfare agents are removed. The photo at left shows the HEPA/Carbon sleeve.

6.       The air then travels into the activated carbon layer to remove the radioactive iodine gas.

7.       The next layer is made of Whetlerite/TEDA carbon to remove any chemical warfare agents.

 

Ultraviolet Bulb Over View Port

8.       The air then passes through a filter fabric to remove any carbon fines.

9.       The last stage of filtration after the filter sleeve is the ultraviolet light chamber were viruses and bacteria are exposed to more than 11,000 microwatts seconds/cm2 killing all airborne viruses and bacteria.

10.   The filtered air then enters the air blower centrifugal reverse curve motorized impellar and into the shelter.

11.   As the air blower pumps filtered air into the shelter, the shelter is slightly pressurized. This positive pressure plus the heat generated in the shelter from body heat, cooking, and showering, forces the spent air to the highest point in shelter near the top of the entranceway.

12.   At the top of the entranceway is the air outlet screen where the spent air passes through and up the air pipe and out of the elliptical hatch dome air outlet hole. Some air will pass through and around the hatch cover base because the hatch cover is not intended to be air-tight.

13.   As the air passes around the underside of the hatch dome is equilibrates with the outside air. This results in little or no thermal signature because there is little difference between the spent air and ambient air.

 

 

 

 

Air Outlet

The spent air containing carbon dioxide, heat, moisture, and odors exits the shelter at the highest point just under the hatch dome. The air outlet housing contains a stainless steel micronic screen to prevent bees and even tiny ants from entering the shelter. The air outlet housing can be closed by inserting a 4 inch diameter plastic pipe plug.

 

 

The P6 Owner’s Manual details specific safe procedures for replacing contaminated HEPA filters. Both air inlet and air outlet have shut-off valves and washable stainless micronic screens accessible from inside the shelter.

 

HATCH DOME

The S.T.A.R.D. (Stealth Terrestrial Attack Resistant Design) 60-inch diameter hatch dome at ground level is aerodynamically smooth. The 24-inch diameter manhole allows very large people with a 75-inch waist to enter the shelter quickly. The hatch dome contains the recessed hatch cover and is designed for severe impact of high speed flying debris. The angle of incidence of the hatch dome is only 20 degrees to allow flying debris to glance off. The hatch dome and hatch cover are designed to resist a non-shattering 3-inch diameter hail ball falling straight down at terminal velocity (87 mph) and impacting directly at a full 90-degree angle of incidence. The hatch dome is also designed to resist a non-shattering 3-inch diameter hail ball traveling horizontally at 150 mph. In addition, the hatch dome can resist a solid 2 x 4 wooden stud impacting the hatch dome like a battering ram or javelin at 30 to 350 mph depending on the hatch class. Some debris, depending on the size, shape, angle of incidence, and mass, may damage the hatch dome. This can be easily repaired with fiberglass repair kits available at marine and automotive supply stores.

Tornado F-Scale

F0

F1

F2

F3

F4

F5

Windspeed (mph)

40-72

73-112

113-157

158-206

207-260

261-318

 

The hatch dome is made of a material called “Combat Composite” which is a structural fire-and bullet-resistant laminate developed by Radius Engineering Inc. The hatch dome is also designed to protect the shelter from a fire reaching 1700oF for one hour while maintaining its structural integrity in compliance to ASTM E119. This design and material makes the P6 very stealthy. It produces little or no thermal signature, little or no metallic signature, and little or no radar signature. When the shelter is installed in the ground, all that can be seen is the dark army-green hatch dome at ground level. This makes it almost impossible to be detected by modern target acquisition equipment. It is designed to resist 350-mph winds and more than 8.5 on the Richter Scale. Although the hatch dome is not impenetrable, it is specifically de­signed to resist seven basic assaults from people trying to break into the shelter in compliance to P.O.P.

 

The hatch dome and hatch cover are manufactured according to The National Institute of Justice NIJ standards from Class 0 (standard on P6) up to Class IV to resist penetration by various threats. The material and thickness vary as the threat level increases. The classes listed below are based on resisting 90% of all of the bullet types at various velocities listed known as (V-90). The barrel length, feet per second (fps) or meters per second (mps) for the test are noted.

 

NIJ

Threat

Level

Hatch Material

(V-90)

Threat/Bullet Type

Barrel

Length

(inches)

fps

mps

Class 0

Structural Fiberglass-self-extinguishing (standard)

Light Hammer and hatchet assaults, 3 in. dia. Hail @ 87-mph vertical, 150-mph horizontal

2 x 4 stud @ 30-mph

NA

NA

NA

Class I

Combat Composite

self-extinguishing

 

.22 Cal. 40 Gr. LR

.25 Cal Auto 71 Gr. FMJ

.32 Cal. Auto 71 Gr. FMJ

.380 Cal. Auto 88 Gr. JHP

.38 Cal Special Lead 158 Gr. RN

.38 Cal Special 158 Gr. SWC

2 x 4 stud @ 70-mph

6

2

4

4

6

6

--

1050

810

905

990

850

850

320

247

276

302

259

259

Class II

Combat Composite

self-extinguishing

 

.41 Mag. 210 Gr. JSP

.44 Mag. 240 Gr. JSP

.44 Mag. 240 Gr. Lead SWC

.357 Mag. 125 Gr. JHP

.357 Mag. 110 Gr. JHP

.357 Mag. 158 Gr. JSP

.357 Mag. 158 Gr. Hornady

19mm 175 Gr. Silvertip

9mm 124 Gr. FMJ

9mm 115 Gr. Silvertip

2 x4 stud @ 100-mph

4

4

4

4

4

6

6

5

5

5

--

1300

1180

1200

1450

1550

1395

1445

1225

1175

1170

397

360

366

442

473

425

441

372

358

355

Class III

Combat Composite

self-extinguishing

 

 

 

 

7.62 NATO Ball 150 Gr. M-80 steel Jack

7.62 NATO Ball 150 Gr. m-80 FMJ

30.06 PSP 180 Gr.

.30 Carbine 110 Gr. FMJ

12-Gauge Rifled Slug

.223 (5.56mm) 55 Gr. FMC

7.62 x 39 Ball

2 x4 stud @ 200-mph

28

28

24

18

18

20

22

22

22

--

2750

2750

2750

1950

1550

3075

2400

838

838

824

595

473

938

732

Class IV

Combat Composite

self-extinguishing

 

30.06 A.P. M-2

7.62 mm NATO A.P. 308 Win

SS 109 FN NATO .223 (5.56mm)

7.62 x 39 Russian/Chinese A.P.I.

2 x4 stud @ 350-mph

26

24

20

22

--

2850

2750

3090

2550

868

838

942

778

Hatch Cover interior and Exterior Lock

The P6 hatch slides open and closed hydraulically powered by a 12 volt hydraulic power unit located on the moon shelf in the shelter. The hatch slides and locks wherever it stops. The remote radio controlled transmitter has a button to slide the hatch closed and open. When inside the shelter, the hatch can be closed by standing on the floor and activating the transmitter. This allows submarine type entry without human power to move the 250 lb hatch cover. The hatch cover is recessed in the hatch dome and protected from flying debris for 320 degrees. The hatch cover is designed to resist 5300 lbs. of uplifting force caused by the negative pressure of a tornado or explosion and 42,080 lbs of overpressure. The average time it takes for untrained or inexperienced people to enter the shelter is approximately 8-10 seconds per person.

 

 

SHELTER DEFENSE

The P6 is not impenetrable but is difficult to break into while shelterists are inside.

INTRUDER ASSAULT

P6 RESISTANCE

1.       Intruder trying to break into hatch using sledgehammer, hatchets, and guns.

Class 0 Hatch resists light hammer and hatchet assaults

Class I -IV Hatch resists all assaults

2.       Intruder trying to clog the air intake/outlet to suffocate the shelterists thus forcing them outside.

Shelterists can open up hatch and reach over to unclog air intake or wait in safety in the shelter for many hours in sealed shelter atmosphere while the intruder is exposed to the outside danger.

3.       Intruder trying to suffocate shelterists by creating fire on top of the hatch thus forcing the shelterists outside.

All classes of the hatch are resistant to fire and the shelterists can breath normally inside the shelter based on sealed shelter atmosphere.

4.       An intruder trying to run over the shelter or hatch with an automobile or truck.

If this vehicle becomes a threat, the Emergency Escape Manway can be used.

5.       An intruder trying to drown shelterists by forcing water into the air inlet/out.

The air inlet on the hatch dome are baffled to prevent this type of assault.

6.       An intruder trying to attach rope onto the hatch or air manifolds to damage or pull out of ground.

The hatch dome is a smooth design with no projections to easily attach to.

  1. An intruder using a cutting torch to cut the hatch open.

The hatch is impervious to a cutting torch.

All attacks above

Release of tear gas through hatch. Details are available only to actual customers.

Storing survival supplies in a house may be a false sense of security during wartime or major natural disasters. Under the 1978 War Powers Act, the President of the U.S. can order local government officials to use limited force to commandeer necessary supplies such as genera­tors, fuel, food, supplies, etc., from houses record­ed on tax records. Even if the location of the shelter were known, it would require much more than limited force to defeat the P6.

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEISMIC JOINT

This seismic joint allows the entranceway free and independent movement from the main shelter. The entranceway is located within the frost line, while the shelter is well below the frost line. This creates tremendous stresses during winter months when the entranceway is forced up 0.5 - 1.25 inches due to frozen ground. The seismic joint removes these stresses by allowing vertical movement of the entranceway and also allows the top of the entranceway to move laterally to maintain structural integrity during rolling ground motion from severe ground shock.

 

SEALED SHELTER ATMOSPHERE

When ground fires are present around the hatch, the air blower should not be turned on to bring in fresh air. During this time, the shelterists must breath in a sealed shelter atmosphere. The safe duration time is based on a 3% carbon dioxide limit. The time it takes for the shelter atmosphere to reach this limit is a function of the number of shelterists, degree of physical activity of the shelterists, and the volume of the shelter above the floor. This duration is shown below for adults performing mild work.

 

 

OVERPRESSURE CHOKING

The P6 does not use blast valves. Instead, it uses the “overpressure choking” which has no moving parts. The inlet air valve and outlet air valve are sized to prevent excessive pressure from developing inside the shelter. This is a combination of what is known as the Ideal Gas Law combined with Bernoulli's Law. These two theories combined state that two volumes of air (outside air volume and shelter air volume) with differing pressure will reach equilibrium or "equilibrate" over a period of time. This period of time depends on the level of overpressure, volume of the shelter, diameter and length of the air inlet and outlet pipe, resistance of air filter, and duration of the overpressure which is very short and constantly decreasing. Simply stated; the air inlet and outlet are sized so that there is not enough time for the two volumes of air to equilibrate. The outside pressure at maximum duration is simply not able to equilibrate through a 3-inch diameter air inlet and outlet within the overpressure duration.

 

PLUMBING SYSTEM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The water supply system is based on a 12-volt high pressure automatically regulated water pump and stainless steel pressure tank to maintain system pressure. The pump produces enough pressure to force the water through the 0.3 micron absolute ceramic water filter and supplies approximately 0.5 gallons per minute at the sink faucet and shower head in the bathroom. Two batteries will supply enough power to pump 1000 gallons of filtered water to the shelter. The fiberglass counter contains a stainless steel sink where dishes and clothes are washed. The sink drains into a 2-gallon gray water tank to supply flushing water to the toilet.

Fittings- The shelter entranceway contains ¾ inch NPTF thru-hull couplings five feet below ground level, for connection to the water tank and ¾ inch NPTF threaded outlets one foot below ground level for bring­ing in antenna lines, a phone line, a power sup­ply, and a 12-volt power cable from a solar panel to recharge the batteries. With the optional communications package there are two additional NPTF fittings located in the hatch dome so HAM and Scanner antennas can be erected from inside. Plugs are provided to be in place when antennas are not in place.

 

12 V Water Pressure System

Toilet- The flush-up toilet is powered by a manual hand pump and uses water from the gray water tank. The sewage is pumped up to the leaching septic tank through an internal hose.

 

Shower- The fiberglass bathroom floor allows all water from the shower head to drain into the shower gray water tank which is transferred to the primary gray water tank under the counter using a manual foot pump. The gray water is used to flush the toilet. NBC decontamination is per­formed in this shower using the supplied decontamination solution and spray bottle.

STORAGE

There are 100 cubic feet of storage (748 gal.) under the floor. In addition there are 42 cubic feet of storage (314 gal.) that allow twenty – 5-gallon food tanks fit under the upper deck. A 20-gallon fiberglass tank is built under the kitchen counter with a radio rack above the counter. The 5 gallon food tanks are used to store grain, powdered milk, salt, sugar, beans, TVP, honey, etc. and hold approximately 1000 lbs. of food, forming a 6 month food supply for four people. The food supply can be extended with the purchase of more food tanks. The material and thickness of these food tanks allows the much preferred carbon dioxide packing of food as opposed to the nitrogen packing of food.

 

ALCOHOL TANK

The 20-gallon methanol tank was sized to boil all the water in the 500-gallon water tank plus all the food in thirty 5-gallon food tanks. Storage is more easily managed with the optional “Moon Shelf” which runs around the perimeter of the shelter to store spare MCAS filters, decontaminating agents, M256A chemical agent test kit, etc.

 

RADIATION SHIELDING

Radiation shielding from overhead in the P6 is provided by 7 feet of earth at the crown of the shelter ceil­ing. With a TRS (Total Rems in Shelter at the bed area) of 7 rems at 20 psi, a person would receive a maximum acute radiation dose from overhead and through the entranceway for neutron and gamma radiation equivalent to 7 mammography x-rays. This dose is based on a 500 KT air burst nuclear weapon, which produces a higher neutron radiation dose than the larger MT weapons, plus fallout doses from a 1 MT surface burst nuclear weapon to maximize the fallout gamma radiation dose.

Based on the worst cancer cases (leukemia) from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki victims, a 10-rem dose may increase the cancer rates from the cur­rent rate of 352/100,000 up to 355/100,000. It should be kept in mind that the Hiroshima victims were totally unprepared and uneducated. They were malnourished and already suffering from many diseases during a critical wartime period where food, medical supplies, and other necessi­ties were in short supply. In addition, they were not only exposed to heavy, acute external radia­tion doses but also internal radiation doses from eating contaminated food and inhaling radioactive fallout. Educated shelterists can avoid such damaging effects and can determine the radiation levels with a simple radiation survey meter.

 

NBC PACKAGE

The P6 can provide life support in severe nuclear, biological and chemical warfare environments with the optional NBC Package. This package contains the MCAS air filtration system to remove, dust, radioactive iodine gas, chemical warfare agents, and ultraviolet light to kill biological agents. A chemical warfare detection kit and a radiation survey meter are part of this package.

MULTIPLE CONNECTIONS

Multiple P6’s can be connected together using “T connectors” and seismic joints. This is usually limited to 10 shelters.

 

SHIPPING AND INSTALLATION

U.S. citizens have a legal right to install a shelter. Under the second amendment of the United States Constitution, U.S. citizens are guaranteed the right to bear arms to provide protection in life threaten­ing situations. Tornadoes, earthquakes, nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare fall under this amendment as life threatening forces. A disaster shelter falls under this classification as a defensive arm. Shipping is arranged by Radius Engineering and confirmed by the customer. The shelter is shipped F.O.B. Radius Factory.

 

 

EXCAVATION

The customer hires a contractor to dig a hole (approximately 200 yards) with a base dimension of 20 feet x 12 feet at a depth of 16 feet. The top of the hole should be larger to allow for sloped walls. The excavation usually requires less than one day. A 32,000 pound excavator or larger should be used to dig the hole and lift the P6 off of the Radius truck and into the hole. If the shelter is installed in a flood zone, the shelter should be installed by berming so the hatch is one foot above the 100-year flood plain. Berming can also be used if the shelter is installed in a location which has ledge.

 

SHELTER INSTALLATION (summary)

1) The shelter is lifted off of the truck and into the hole by the excavator where it is leveled at the proper height at the bottom of the hole. 2) The entranceway is lifted on to the shelter and connected using 24- ½ in bolts. 3) The shelter is then backfilled with 80 yards of ¾ minus crushed stone or pea stone. After this stage, the surrounding soil can be used for backfill and must be compact­ed evenly around the shelter. 4) The water tank is lifted into the hole next to the entranceway and three 3/4- inch diameter hoses are connected to the shelter. 5) When the backfill height reaches the shelter septic tank, 1 cubic yard of crushed stone or pea stone for the leaching field should be placed around the septic tank and emergency escape manway. 6) When the backfilling reaches 12 inches below ground level, all the antenna cables, telephone lines, 12 volt lines etc. are connected. 7) Backfill­ing continues to the original ground level. Back­filling usually requires approximately 8 hours.

 

BUILDING VS. BUYING

Advantages of purchasing a commercial underground shelter:

1) With shelters built on site, cost overruns are the rule, not the exception. Many well-intended handymen and contractors have constructed shelters which ended up running well over budget and still did not produce an operable shelter. When a shelter is built on site, you really don’t know what you will end up with. The P6 shelter allows people to deal with known costs and a proven shelter system. 2) Shelters built on site require extensive, time consum­ing, and expensive research to develop a “shelter sys­tem” capable of providing dependable life support—fresh filtered air, blast protection, clean water, light, corrosion resistance, toilet facilities, air filtration for radioactive fallout, chemical and biological agents, etc., all of which should meet - PRINCI­PLES of PROTECTION, U.S. Handbook of NBC Weapon Fundamentals and Shelter Design Stand­ards, by Walton McCarthy, is available for $65.00 from The American Civil Defense Association, (TACDA). Even good architects or mechanical and civil engineers, do not have the expertise to develop a good dependable shelter system especially when it must function without local electricity. The P6 shelter system is based on the ES10 and P6 shelter, which has over 20 years proven field experience and complies with all P.O.P. standards. 3) Concrete shelters built on site are not able to be excavated and re-installed at another location and they are very hard to make waterproof, especially under the floor. The shortcomings of steel underground storage tanks are: a) They may require registration because its intended use is for storage of petroleum and/or chemi­cal products. b) A horizontal cylinder is a poor struc­tural shape because it behaves as flexible conduit. c) It must also be cathodically protected or fiberglass coated. d) Steel underground structures suffer from condensation on the inside walls. The P6 is designed strictly as a shelter and can be excavated and re-installed at some other location if desired. 4) Shelters built on site require a building permit and confirmation by a local professional engineer because it involves actual construction, including a septic design. The P6 is a commercially available, professionally engineered disaster shelter with a formal Owner’s Manual reviewing all operations. If require, it is much easier to secure a building permit for installing the P6 shelter than it is for constructing a shelter on site. 5) Shelters built on site often require many days or weeks to complete construction. During this time, children are exposed to the danger of falling in the hole and curiosity seekers are afforded ample time to see what is being constructed. The P6 can be installed in one day. 6) Shelters built on site have no established market value. The P6 has a known commercial value which allows financing by banking institutions. 7) Large shelters built on site to protect many people present the following problems: a) A separate piece of land must be agreed on by the shelterists and pur­chased. This piece of land may have to be commercially zoned. Local land may not be available; also, a caretaker may have to be appointed. b) A professional engineer and architect must be consulted for the design. c) A commercial building and septic permit must be issued. Even a single-family shelter is difficult to con­struct unnoticed. This is rather difficult to obtain because the building code requirements do not apply to under­ground structures designed for disaster environments. The technology for modern shelters is very different than that of standard building structures. d) Under­ground and above-ground storage tanks designed to contain fuel and water must be registered and approved by local and federal environmental protection agencies (EPA). e) Notification to the local fire department of the exact location of all fuel tanks must be made. f) Financ­ing such a structure by a local bank is impossible be­cause it has no resale value due to its custom nature. g) To make matters more complicated, the applications for all the above permits are a matter of public record. The only solution in the United States is to install a commercially available single or dual family shelter.

 


WARRANTY

Radius Engineering Inc. warranties that the fiberglass parts of the P6 Disaster Shelter will not leak, corrode, or structurally fail for a period of 20 years provided that 1) the shelter is not exposed to excessive overpressure, 2) The structural parts of the shelter are not modified. 3) The shelter is inspected, off-loaded, assembled, backfilled and installed in accordance with the company’s installation instructions. The warranty does not apply to the parts and equipment that Radius Engineering Inc. does not manufacture. These items are covered by the individual manufacturers. Radius Engineering Inc. is continuously improving it’s product and therefore reserves the right to change any specification without notice. Our liability under this warranty shall be limited to, at our option, repair of the shelter, or delivery of a replacement shelter to the point of original delivery, or refund of the original purchase price. We shall not be liable for any indirect or consequential damages, labor, or installation costs.