MarkCorrigan
Героям слава!
Please have a look at this animation from Dutch television.
It shows what went wrong (loss of coolant, emergency coolant injected), but also shows what would happen in case of a meltdown.
The reactor vessel is on 30 cm thick (according to this news item).
The reactor building has a hole in it.
based on this information, it looks like a meltdown would result in quite lot of radioactive material escaping the building, not just causing a huge molten mess in the reactor vessel as many here claim (if I remember correctly).
Can those in the know enlighten me?
You didn't link the animation, but given how you describe it, there's a serious problem in that the reactor containment vessel is not the reactor building. The containment vessel should hold against a meltdown quite easily, so if it isn't breached, then the hole in the building could be an inch or a metre wide and it wouldn't matter.