And now please take off the masks for a second and introduce yourself.
Your first name, your last name.
Vermil Kiril Dmitrievich
Where are you from?
Perm city
Please
Surkov Alexander Stepanovich
Where are you from?
 Lisichansk
Puzikov Alexander Vasilyevich, Sverdlovsk
Lavrenko Victor Alexandrovich, Dzhambul
Thank you very much, everyone.
The whole country, damn it
And what about this monitor, what is its purpose?
There will be no people
To wash away
 The monitor to follow
The pressure is sufficient, there is a fire hose there
All this dirt, radioactive dust, it washes away
Not only dust, the monitor with its power forces out even those stones that the robot cannot take, it knocks them out.
With a powerful water flow it knocks out everything that has welded-in.
Here is a helicopter, it is just dragging the monitor.
Right here, in the upper part of this monitor, there is a lock and this lock just attaches the monitor to that cable.
Hanging down from a helicopter.
The lock has capabilities to open and close when pulling the auxiliary cable which passes next to the main cable.
And here is the cable hanging for the monitor installation.
As a rule, a member of the group, some dosimetrist,...
...he caught this cable and pulled the monitor to the place where the helicopter had to put it down.
Then fire hydrants were connected to this hydromonitor, and ordinary water was supplied through them.
The drops entrapped radioactivity and planted it on the roof.
And there a jet of powerful water shot down this radioactivity, it flowed to the bottom.
Where do they work, guys, where do you work?
This one on the monitor, on the monitor
 They contacted when they were sent
Now, here they are talking on the radio.
Radio station, at that time we called them talkie-walkie and these talkie-walkie, this is a distorted name, by us.
But these radio stations were usually Japanese-made.
Because of the secrecy, we called the units of measurement in such a way: milliroentgens we called ‘small’.
And roentgens – ‘big’ and we said, for example, ‘40 small’ means 40 milliroentgens, and ‘20 big’ means 20 roentgens.
This was about the dose, for example, obtained by dosimetrist-scout.
And the soldiers, for the soldiers, a dose of 20 roentgens was set, a maximum dose.
And the hydromonitor had to wash out graphite and a soft roof, from the soft roof all radioactive substances had to be sent to the roof drain.
This I don’t know.
This is ... and this is zone N, a vent pipe.
Here it lies here, this is zone N, here I gleamed with my glasses.
Well, if this monitor is capable of destroying barren rock, somewhere in a surface mine, then of course it can tear a graphite block from the roof.
But this is not me, I was wrong.
I am in a blue suit and without this armor, without rubberized aprons.
I am in a blue suit and without this armor, without rubberized aprons.
In our group it was only possible to determine, high radioactivity, and we wore ties on the mediastinum, lead, no more.
And Putikov, he was responsible, he was in our group, and he was responsible for delivering the monitor,
he accompanied this monitor, he had to unhook it from the helicopter
and land it in the place where this monitor had to be installed according to the project
Putnikov was in our group, I brought him.
Right now, here he will be hit by the lock due to the heat rising from the ventilation pipe.
Then, when the helicopter will jerk up, it will hit him in the face under the chin, will hit.
And here we are dragging him, together with Ionin.
Because of this blow damaging his face and head, he was forced to leave and go Sverdlovsk.
In Sverdlovsk, too, at first, he had to prove that he worked at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant,
performed the duties of a dosimetrist-scout and worked there in a group, but then he succeeded in this and he became a liquidator.
