Dirty_South_Cracka
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja2yab5 wrote
Reply to comment by Talamakara in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
Efficiency and output are two completely different metrics. That being said, 33.6% efficient is pretty damn good considering there are no moving parts. The most efficient steam turbines are only about 45% efficient and that is modern technology. The ones in use today are right around 35%.
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja1wz8b wrote
Reply to comment by DiablolicalScientist in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
Most modern residential panels are rated for 80%+ output for 25 years. I think that's actually pretty impressive.
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja1qnx3 wrote
Reply to comment by jeffyoulose in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
Isn't that exactly what oil is?
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja1kwf9 wrote
Reply to comment by pinkfootthegoose in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
I would love to see more info on how that works. Are they converting DC back to AC for distribution on our current grid? Can our current grid handle DC transmission without significant loss cheaply? I'm not trying to be difficult, I'm geniunely curious.
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja1k3as wrote
Reply to comment by charliej102 in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
That's almost 450 miles wide and deep. A single strand of 0000 AWG wire that stretches 450 miles at $10.00 per ft. would cost almost 24 million dollars. I just can't see how that is feasible.
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja1fiy8 wrote
Reply to comment by smsutton in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
This is what few people realize... its not the local generation that's a big deal. Any moron who can turn an electric drill can setup a solar array. It's the infrastructure needed to deliver that power reliably on a distributed grid that is difficult and expensive. I'm not even sure if current copper production/availability would survive trying to accomplish such a feat. Much less the amount of lithium needed to make batteries. We're simply trading one eventuality for another.
Solar is doomed as a full replacement for carbon until a cheap battery (sodium maybe) that can be recharged 1000's of times and recycled can be developed.
We don't need more solar technology, we need a better battery chemistry... and we need it quick.
Dirty_South_Cracka t1_ja306ir wrote
Reply to comment by billdietrich1 in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
I've been hearing that same bullshit for the last 20 years. We've been perpetually almost there sine the early 2000's. Molen salt was supposed to be the wonder battery then.