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Old 02-05-2019, 04:06 PM   #4821 (permalink)
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Storage is not cheap.
If I go off grid the largest expenditure by far will be the batteries.
Your blind optimism isn't fooling anyone.

You say "nuclear is more expensive" it's not more expensive than wind that doesn't work at night covered by batteries that are unaffordable. There's no way to build enough batteries to cover the power that could be produced by a nuclear plant at night, cost less than a nuclear power plant and last 40 or 50 years.

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Old 02-05-2019, 04:34 PM   #4822 (permalink)
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Nuke plants can go 100 years, they just haven't been around long enough to prove it yet.
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Old 02-05-2019, 05:33 PM   #4823 (permalink)
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Former Tesla workers have provided worrying accounts of the current state of the company’s production plant in Buffalo, New York.

https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2019/...ated-for-show/


Dwindling sales.

Quote:
Tesla reported a 21 percent decrease in installed solar systems for the fourth quarter which appeared to add to the lack of production at the facility. Dale Witherell and another worker, Dennis Scott, saw the slow production rate at the factory firsthand: “We’re paid for 12 hours to work, not watch movies,” Scott said. Witherell added: “During my employment there, nothing improved during the entire employment as far as production.”

Witherell continued to say: “Some weeks we produced enough solar modules for zero homes and probably the best I saw was maybe four homes in a week, so that is alarmingly scary to obviously be a part of a company who doesn’t have any sense of urgency to tackle these issues and get them working correctly.”

When it comes to production, Tesla knows how to talk the talk but doesn't know how to walk the walk.




 
Old 02-05-2019, 05:45 PM   #4824 (permalink)
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A Tesla car battery can store as much electricity as my house needs in 10 days. That would see it through many a sunless and windless night.
It is entirely possible, but admittedly quite expensive.

Then it would be stupid to have every house equipped with big batteries. There's a grid, and the wider it cooperates the lesser the variations will be - not zero, absolutely not; but much less than local.
Strategically placed units on the grid can be cheaper, smaller in total and much more effective. They could f.i. also help improve the electric phase integrity.
Many EVs will be hooked up to the grid at any one time. They can be charged 'smart' when beyond a certain minimal level or even provide a buffer to optimize supply and demand.
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For confirmation go to people just like you.
For education go to people unlike yourself.

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Old 02-05-2019, 06:21 PM   #4825 (permalink)
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Maine Yankee nuclear power station, the one I am most familiar with as some of dad's family built it only lasted about 30 years I was going with worst case scenario.

The steam line coming out of the reactor cracked because they used a very unusual explosive welding technique to connect the reactor core to the super heated water outlet pipes.
It saved 2 or 3 weeks of welding, but cut the life of the plant in half because when it cracks it was pretty much impossible to repair. If the titanium sleeve to stainless steel pipe bond bond broke then there is no way to repair it.
A reactor core leak on PWR like that is really not good.

The thing that did maine Yankee in was an engineering design flaw.
My dads family that worked on it were just stupid welders.
Funny thing is if they let the stupid welders do their job instead of let the engineers try something new, cool and fun that nuclear power plants would still be going.
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Old 02-05-2019, 06:35 PM   #4826 (permalink)
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That's what I'm talking about RD. I'd love to see grid connected EVs be part of the storage solution to the renewable problem.

Incentivize the EV owners to charge during excess renewable generation or off-peak, and incentivize them to sell back a portion of the energy when there's not enough renewable energy or during peak use.
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Old 02-05-2019, 07:16 PM   #4827 (permalink)
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I'm not connecting my EV to help power the power grid.


Plus right now the only vehicle to grid protocol is chademo. The cheapest home chademo charger is about $3,500 and doesn't do vehicle to grid.
Who's going pay $3,500 or more just to wear their battery out faster?
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Old 02-05-2019, 07:41 PM   #4828 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by oil pan 4 View Post
I'm not connecting my EV to help power the power grid.


Plus right now the only vehicle to grid protocol is chademo. The cheapest home chademo charger is about $3,500 and doesn't do vehicle to grid.
Who's going pay $3,500 or more just to wear their battery out faster?
There would need to be a new standard for sure. but most all electrical components needed to do vehicle to grid are already in every vehicle. The onboard charger that converts 240v AC to ~400v DC could be used to push the other direction.

What would then be needed is for the vehicle to be internet connected so that charging/discharging could be remotely controlled on demand. Many vehicles are already internet connected.

It would be an opt-in sort of thing where with a phone app, you decide if or when you're participating in grid leveling and what state of charge range you're willing to utilize.

I'd happily sell 20 kWh of a 60 kWh battery at 10 cents each, making $2 per day in the process. That's $730 a year and not much wear on the battery. Imagine charging your EV at $0.05/kWh and selling power back at $0.15/kWh. I like the idea of a passive income on assets already owned, even if it is small.

I wouldn't participate either if my EV only had 23 kWh and no active thermal management. In the future, 40 kWh will be the smallest size EV battery. That leaves plenty of buffer for the typical owner to sell some energy back to the grid.

People already participate in sharing their under-utilized resources in projects like SETI at home, where an idle computer crunches numbers. Those participants don't even get compensated, so just think how popular grid leveling would be if there were incentive.

Heck, my average household electrical consumption is somewhere around 15 kWh. 1 EV alone could run 2 houses for a day.
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Old 02-05-2019, 08:16 PM   #4829 (permalink)
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Teslas Solar city in Buffalo NY is the largest PV cell and module factory in the Western Hemisphere.

It was supposed to produce 1 gigawatt worth of panels a yr. by the end of 2018 and 2 gigawatts per yr. by the end of 2019.

It is no where near making even a fraction of what was proposed.


Local coverage with video that shows inside of plant.

https://www.wivb.com/news/investigat...ant/1754568826


However, there may be a glimmer of light .

Quote:
There was no mention of the potential of manufacturing a new product in Buffalo, but former Tesla employees said that managers in Buffalo recently showed off a new product. One described it as energy storage battery systems for utilities and commercial businesses.

“We came in for the start of one of our shifts about a month ago – it was some time in December – and the plant manager was there and unveiled a curtain over a large container,” Witherell said.

“He said the goal was in June to be having a line at Gigafactory II producing [the new product]. I believe they are trying to do whatever they can because of the failing solar modules.”

Tesla declined to comment on the new product.

It may have something to do with of Teslas purchase of Maxwell and their line of super capacitors.

I’m not posting Teslas problems to make fun of them.

I want them to succeed...

What it does show however, is that transitioning from fossil to renewable energy is not as easy as it sounds or made out to be.




>
 
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Old 02-05-2019, 09:39 PM   #4830 (permalink)
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Yeah some people just think turning off nuclear power plants, building some solar panels and wind turbines fixes everything.

Quote:
Originally Posted by redpoint5 View Post
There would need to be a new standard for sure. but most all electrical components needed to do vehicle to grid are already in every vehicle. The onboard charger that converts 240v AC to ~400v DC could be used to push the other direction.

What would then be needed is for the vehicle to be internet connected so that charging/discharging could be remotely controlled on demand. Many vehicles are already internet connected.

It would be an opt-in sort of thing where with a phone app, you decide if or when you're participating in grid leveling and what state of charge range you're willing to utilize.

I'd happily sell 20 kWh of a 60 kWh battery at 10 cents each, making $2 per day in the process. That's $730 a year and not much wear on the battery. Imagine charging your EV at $0.05/kWh and selling power back at $0.15/kWh. I like the idea of a passive income on assets already owned, even if it is small.

I wouldn't participate either if my EV only had 23 kWh and no active thermal management. In the future, 40 kWh will be the smallest size EV battery. That leaves plenty of buffer for the typical owner to sell some energy back to the grid.

People already participate in sharing their under-utilized resources in projects like SETI at home, where an idle computer crunches numbers. Those participants don't even get compensated, so just think how popular grid leveling would be if there were incentive.

Heck, my average household electrical consumption is somewhere around 15 kWh. 1 EV alone could run 2 houses for a day.
The j1772 protocol only allows for 1 way power flow.
CCS, same thing.
Still there is the problem of the cost of the unit which is not cheap.

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