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sunburn in the winter usually is only an issue when its sunny outside. not when its currently snowing.
i dont know why thats a point here.
this idea is for the usa. it is feasible light wise for the usa. and i cant think of a hippy who would oppose this. its not ruining any new land. and its putting existing land to extra use. maybe its not feasible for iliveastonesthrowfromthenorthpoleville canada.
sometimes great ideas are not about the cost. but the impact it will have on our daily lives and our environment. i would gladly pay an extra grand on my taxes to have this.AWD > RWD
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Originally posted by BillBrasky View PostYou've never left Palm Beach, have you?
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Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View PostIf you lived in the tropics, would you really want to leave? I haven't seen snow since 1988, and don't miss it a bit (born in Mass).
Oh, I know. I can't wait until I'm able to move south. If it never went below 70 degrees the rest of my life, I'd be the happiest man on Earth.
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Originally posted by mrsleeve View PostNo It costs on the order of 1.4mill a Per Megawatt of power to build a wind turbine and about 600-800k to build with conventional fired power generation (IE Coal or Natural gas).
It takes VAST amounts of real estate to build a 800meg wind farm, Vs a few hundred acres for a Conventional fired or nuke facility. No to mention the anual cost of Maintenance of those turbines and the lease and Royalties you have to pay the guy actuly owns the ground that mill is sitting on. Just royalty payments are on the order 4k a year per turbine.
Solar, Fairly sure the sun dont shine at night, same real estate issues, where it is sunny all much of the time the hippies and greenies wont allow the arrays to be built or the transmission infrastructure to be built to get the power to market.
The only reason wind/solar is going up right now is the HUGE subsides coming form the feds put them up and maintain them. When that dries up well that will be it for that bubble industry.
If it was a economically viable means of production, for power (in the world of price controlled power) we would have been seeing utilities doing for the last 70 years.
NO again, We have over 150 years of Coal supplies, and about the same for natural Gas form just 2 major deposits that are just now starting to see development. With our modern scrubber tech, the ari coming outta the stacks at these plants is cleaner than the air going in, and getting better every day. The efficiency of these plants is also getting better and better there by extending that Coal and N/G supply even further. Not to mention we have not built a Nuke plant in 30+ years.
Also the C02 can be scrubbed outta those plants can be used in the tight gas and oil shale plays to aid in freeing resource from parent rock and pushing it to the well points.
See above.
So with this road of yours we get to enjoy the higher taxes to build it, sky high energy rates to pay for and maintain it. What do we do about making Juice when its dark???? Gooddie I am tickled pink over this thought.
Edit: With this huge over abundance (the video said we could make more than 3 times the us demand) Power should be super Uber Cheap. Think like 2 cents a KwH, thanks to the laws of supply and demand. But then we have to add the taxes, and govt fees to it and it will be even more than what it is now. Then we have the problem of the federal govt owning the entirety power generation sector, not just having limited regulatory control. In some states they have have price controls on the generation industry. This would leave it all 100% control in every regard to the govts, and eliminated any private interest outta the equation. This seems like a VERY VERY slippery fucking slope to me as well.
Have you heard of the West? Have you heard of canyons/public lands/open areas? Batteries?
For every no there are yesses, for every infrastructure issue there WERE the same issues for coal/oil/gas BEFORE they were commonplace.
What about a solution. We are at the mercy of big energy and it is time for change.
Thanks for the thoughtful response at least you use logic and information as opposed to "this is dumb".
[IMG]https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/my350z.com-vbulletin/550x225/80-parkerbsig_5096690e71d912ec1addc4a84e99c374685fc03 8.jpg[/IMG
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Originally posted by BillBrasky View PostOh, I know. I can't wait until I'm able to move south. If it never went below 70 degrees the rest of my life, I'd be the happiest man on Earth.
Good weather all year (I actually like the heat)
Sebring=2hours
Daytona=3 hours
Homestead=1.5 hours
PBIR=15 minutes
Savannah=6 hours
Rd ATL=11 hours
VIR=12 hoursBrian Jacobs
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Originally posted by briansjacobs View Postgot a wicked sunburn in crested butte
that and I dont see the MYT making all the much torque, and seems like it would have to have a shit load of RPM to just keep it self running let alone power anything.Originally posted by FusionIf a car is the epitome of freedom, than an electric car is house arrest with your wife titty fucking your next door neighbor.
The Desire to Save Humanity is Always a False Front for the Urge to Rule it- H. L. Mencken
Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants.
William Pitt-
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Originally posted by parkerbink View PostHave you heard of the West? Have you heard of canyons/public lands/open areas? Batteries?
Ask Spain how that solar power thing is working out for them. Batt Tech is not there yet, and is more harmful for the environment, than conventional means of production. The hippies and greenies are stopping us from being able to have a once a year Horse back event on a pirticular chunk of Federal land, they are trying to keep hikers, and horse back riders, Mt Bikers and every other from of recreation off much of the federal land, that has been held every year since the end of WWII up here (this year the BHO admin appointee director of federal lands for this area, told us to fuck off) . While its not wide spread yet its gaining lots of traction out west. This is also very indicative of energy production, that in recent years the feds have been buying up tons of land out west that has lots of oil/gas/coal underneath it (13m ac this last spring). The govt gets a better lease/royalty rate on energy production from federal/state lands than private individual as it is now with petroleum/mineral extraction, The same would go for wind, or solar there by makeing it more expensive. Then we get into the whole Not In My Back Yard (NIMBY) thing, which is a whole different thread
If the private utilities do put up some of the capital to do this road thing, any and all savings that may be realized by ease and volume of production would be negated by the lease and royalties to be paid on use of the State/fed owned ROW for the road. SO the power itself would as much or more than conventional generation, and the huge cost of subsides via our tax dollars would give it nice double whammy to OUR wallets.
Its in the enviro nuts that run our govt's best interests to make Coal/NG (and to a certain degree Nuke) artificially expensive to produce power from. Its the only way that Wind/Solar/wave etc... can be economically competitive, hence why they have tried several times for the Cap and trade bill, then when the public caught on to that they changed the name to "The American Power Act" Same damm bill. Still got no traction, so now they are still trying to get a scaled back version through (afaik just minus some of the pork).
Originally posted by parkerbinkFor every no there are yesses, for every infrastructure issue there WERE the same issues for coal/oil/gas BEFORE they were commonplace.
Originally posted by parkerbinkWhat about a solution. We are at the mercy of big energy and it is time for change.
Really many of the issues with "being at the mercy of Big energy" has to do with govt interference and meddling. With oil, its taxes, taxes, taxes, taxes, and more taxes. Taxes make up the bulk of the cost of motor fuel and good chunk of other fuels is taxes as well.
With the power generation sector in many places the state has/had regulated the price they could charge for a KwH. This put the screws to the utilities and in many cases operated in the red for long periods, when the Fed EPA or State DEP/DEQ mandated newer pollution controls and other infrastructure up grades. Thus the service you receive is crap, because they are running on a bare bones, razor thin line due to govt interference, this is why many utilities branched out into NG and other forms of energy and industry. Or several communities got together, with bond proposals, to pay for and build their own local power company Co-Op's.
Originally posted by parkerbinkThanks for the thoughtful response at least you use logic and information as opposed to "this is dumb".
Hey I am all for doing something and developing alternative tech, But lets not step on our dick in the process, by ignoring the sources we have now. This is the proverbial step over a dollar to pick up a dime scenario. Its a hell of Idea I will give you that, and maybe in 10-20-30 years we will have a better means of execution for this that can be implemented for minimal cost with in current road building tech, and incorporate the distribution infrastructure with in that road as well. I see thermal transfer of some kind as a MUCH better way to go about this than conventional solar cell.Last edited by mrsleeve; 08-25-2010, 11:55 PM.Originally posted by FusionIf a car is the epitome of freedom, than an electric car is house arrest with your wife titty fucking your next door neighbor.
The Desire to Save Humanity is Always a False Front for the Urge to Rule it- H. L. Mencken
Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants.
William Pitt-
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Originally posted by mrsleeve View Posthelps when the Snow Reflects of the Snow tough dont it.
that and I dont see the MYT making all the much torque, and seems like it would have to have a shit load of RPM to just keep it self running let alone power anything.
The MYT is often treated worse than the Wankel ever was, yet once into production, it (Wankel) was actually classified as an engine with twice the displacement of a conventional pushrod/ohc motor solely because it produced more power with slightly more oil consumption. Imagine 1.5 power strokes per crank rotation, magnified.
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Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View PostWell, good sir, you know RPM=tq ;)
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