KennyG, Thanks for that. Is my understanding correct that, as with molten salts in a solar powered system (where the sun's heat is concentrated to heat the salts to a liquid state - typical temps exceed 1000F according to the 'net, the heat is then used to produce steam to drive generators?
If that is so, then the salts are storing heat, which is capable of continually being renewed to working temperature by the reactor (if I understand correctly) since you are saying that all but 1% or so of the heat is unused in the steam production. That would make it similar to the way the solar heated method operates (this keeps me on topic!!) except that the solar method stores the heat for use overnight, and uses much more of the stored heat, possibly/probably/definitely enough that the salts return to a solid state due to the drop in temperature, therefore needing to be reheated to a much greater degree than that used in the nuclear method.
The nuclear also has the advantage of being able to add more heat on a permanent basis, (must add more to maintain the cooling process?) whereas the solar relies on the sun during daylight hours. Or, if the stored heat at sunrise in the solar method still remains high enough to produce steam for the generators, it merely needs to be "topped up" as with the nuclear method. I do not know, because the blurb is all about being able to produce electricity from the sun during the night. As with most things in life neither side gives you the full info.