I should’ve got solar when I first bought my home and now it sky rocketed lol
Actually solar is much cheaper then before.
The problem is finding a reputable vendor and installer, as most of them are stright up crooks.
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I should’ve got solar when I first bought my home and now it sky rocketed lol
The ol' DTE markup. What are we at now? Like 19 cents kW/hr?My total electric bill is about $350-$550 a month, depending on the season. My tanks are about $200 a month by themselves. I work for an electric company but don’t get a discount. Reef tanks are definitely not budget friendly. I live in Michigan.
They can charge them overnight when most people are asleep, and many cars can return power to the grid once they're full.Wait until the classify your aquarium as a luxury item and require it to be on as smart metered socket so that they can bill you peak and/or turn it off when your neighbor wants to charge their electric car or run their electric stove... because the grid is overloaded. Coming to a town near you soon
When everyone else is charging their cars too?They can charge them overnight when most people are asleep,
That makes absolutely zero sense. Why would you consume energy to generate power, lose 66% of that power in the form of heat during multiple steps of transmission and transformation, lose another 15%-30% of that energy in the charging process as heat in the charging equipment and battery and THEN take what you have just charged and incur another 10%-15% loss transforming it and retransmitting it back to the grid where it will lose another 66% by the time somebody else uses - if if everything is battery powered incur even more loss charing THAT battery. Insanity!and many cars can return power to the grid once they're full.
What good is infrastructure when there is no generation capacity to power it? We are shutting down coal, gas, nuclear and hydro at an alarming rate. Wind farms and solar panels can't come close to replacing it, yet the insanity that prevails wants everything that moves, beeps, chugs, flys, or goes vroom vroom or put put to be electric. Insanity!Not to mention that with years of advanced notice, the power companies can start investing in that infrastructure now. unless they don't, which they won't, because it doesn't make them money Right Now.
When everyone else is charging their cars too?
That makes absolutely zero sense. Why would you consume energy to generate power, lose 66% of that power in the form of heat during multiple steps of transmission and transformation, lose another 15%-30% of that energy in the charging process as heat in the charging equipment and battery and THEN take what you have just charged and incur another 10%-15% loss transforming it and retransmitting it back to the grid where it will lose another 66% by the time somebody else uses - if if everything is battery powered incur even more loss charing THAT battery. Insanity!
What good is infrastructure when there is no generation capacity to power it? We are shutting down coal, gas, nuclear and hydro at an alarming rate. Wind farms and solar panels can't come close to replacing it, yet the insanity that prevails wants everything that moves, beeps, chugs, flys, or goes vroom vroom or put put to be electric. Insanity!
To that end ignoring generation capacity - "infrastructure" is an easy word to toss around. Increasing power delivery capacity to any single endpoint is challenging, increasing delivery capacity 20x to 100x to an entire nation is beyond a monumental task. I don't think you can fathom the context of that "infrastructure".
Electricity costs in CA are mostly due to the lack of generation capacity and power having to be purchased on demand from far away at a premium.
In any case, not really a conversation for here.
When everyone else is charging their cars too?
That makes absolutely zero sense. Why would you consume energy to generate power, lose 66% of that power in the form of heat during multiple steps of transmission and transformation, lose another 15%-30% of that energy in the charging process as heat in the charging equipment and battery and THEN take what you have just charged and incur another 10%-15% loss transforming it and retransmitting it back to the grid where it will lose another 66% by the time somebody else uses - if if everything is battery powered incur even more loss charing THAT battery. Insanity!
What good is infrastructure when there is no generation capacity to power it? We are shutting down coal, gas, nuclear and hydro at an alarming rate. Wind farms and solar panels can't come close to replacing it, yet the insanity that prevails wants everything that moves, beeps, chugs, flys, or goes vroom vroom or put put to be electric. Insanity!
To that end ignoring generation capacity - "infrastructure" is an easy word to toss around. Increasing power delivery capacity to any single endpoint is challenging, increasing delivery capacity 20x to 100x to an entire nation is beyond a monumental task. I don't think you can fathom the context of that "infrastructure".
Electricity costs in CA are mostly due to the lack of generation capacity and power having to be purchased on demand from far away at a premium.
In any case, not really a conversation for here.
I agree with your last sentence, but I figured since it got brought up...
Currently the electrical grid demand brought by electrical cars in California is about 1% of their output, so I have confidence people genuinely working on this issue can work the issues out long term.
Pocket calculators used to be heavy and expensive, but that's obviously changed. I think it's important to keep in mind that technology is continuously improving. We figured out air conditioning; I think with some actual planning it's possible to accommodate complex things. And yes charging it at night is, when everyone else is charging their cars, because people aren't doing other stuff in nearly the same quantity like 4 loads of laundry. thus reducing the draw on the grid. Same idea as using anything else with a demand that changes depending on the time of day.
I agree with your last sentence, but I figured since it got brought up I'd at least offer my 2c. Tbh, imo there is a non- insignificant portion of people here who nonchalantly add stuff about contentious non-reefing topics and then swerve to "don't get all political pal" when someone challenges them on what they said, which I'm not sure I quite understand, but I guess it's on the other people to not take the bait, and I don't necessarily think you were doing that either.When everyone else is charging their cars too?
That makes absolutely zero sense. Why would you consume energy to generate power, lose 66% of that power in the form of heat during multiple steps of transmission and transformation, lose another 15%-30% of that energy in the charging process as heat in the charging equipment and battery and THEN take what you have just charged and incur another 10%-15% loss transforming it and retransmitting it back to the grid where it will lose another 66% by the time somebody else uses - if if everything is battery powered incur even more loss charing THAT battery. Insanity!
What good is infrastructure when there is no generation capacity to power it? We are shutting down coal, gas, nuclear and hydro at an alarming rate. Wind farms and solar panels can't come close to replacing it, yet the insanity that prevails wants everything that moves, beeps, chugs, flys, or goes vroom vroom or put put to be electric. Insanity!
To that end ignoring generation capacity - "infrastructure" is an easy word to toss around. Increasing power delivery capacity to any single endpoint is challenging, increasing delivery capacity 20x to 100x to an entire nation is beyond a monumental task. I don't think you can fathom the context of that "infrastructure".
Electricity costs in CA are mostly due to the lack of generation capacity and power having to be purchased on demand from far away at a premium.
In any case, not really a conversation for here.
Hence the ever increasing proportion of power coming from renewable/long term sources these days.You basically just summarized the huge argument against electric cars. Electric cars run on battery but it’s coal and fossil fuels that make the power that gets send to the charging stations. And it's inefficient
Hence the ever increasing proportion of power coming from renewable/long term sources these days.
Idk about you, but I think it's super efficient to use the nearly one million mile across blinding ball of nuclear fusion that will be blasting our planet for the next 5 billion years or so for with free energy for power. In the US the current split is about 60% fossil fuel and 40% renewables/nuclear, but that's changing rapidly anyways. Plus the percentage varies state by state. In Michigan where I am, nuclear power provides about the same amount as fossil fuels.
Bottom axis is year, I believe. No reason to assume that those numbers won't continue to change.
Anyways, I said I wasn't gonna argue, so *zips mouth shut, creeps away awkwardly*
I honestly don’t want to know lol we have 5 big tanks, but believe $400-$500 a month!hello reefers!!
My electricity bill has been a lot higher lately. I live in California with 30 cent per kWh!
I added an energy monitor the other day and it cost me $1.5 per day to run my tank! I imagine it would be $2 per day in the winter. It’s only a 90G tank with 3 XR15s and no skimmer.
My electric bill used to be $100-$150 before my tank and now it’s $220-$350 with only 2 adults and 1 toddler in a newly built home.
What’s your guys electricity bill with the tank??
You mean that building and maintaining large dirty power stations doesn't use stuff that may cause cancer or poison you.Um power stations can run for years maybe decades and are reliable. solar is unreliable and can contain chemicals that could cause cancer or just poison you.
Actually I do believe that most owners of EV's charge them using roof top solar - at least I do.You basically just summarized the huge argument against electric cars. Electric cars run on battery but it’s coal and fossil fuels that make the power that gets send to the charging stations. And it’s inefficient
Actually I do believe that most owners of EV's charge them using roof top solar - at least I do.
I’m going to add onto the argument you have to dispose of hundreds of tons of lithium when it can’t be used for batteries anymore. How is that “ environment friendly”???????You basically just summarized the huge argument against electric cars. Electric cars run on battery but it’s coal and fossil fuels that make the power that gets send to the charging stations. And it’s inefficient
As ridiculous as this sounds. Why Not just create a working fusion reactor that can produce power instead of having to use solar panels.Hence the ever increasing proportion of power coming from renewable/long term sources these days.
Idk about you, but I think it's super efficient to use the nearly one million mile across blinding ball of nuclear fusion that will be blasting our planet for the next 5 billion years or so for with free energy for power. In the US the current split is about 60% fossil fuel and 40% renewables/nuclear, but that's changing rapidly anyways. Plus the percentage varies state by state. In Michigan where I am, nuclear power provides about the same amount as fossil fuels.
Bottom axis is year, I believe. No reason to assume that those numbers won't continue to change.
Anyways, I said I wasn't gonna argue, so *zips mouth shut, creeps away awkwardly*
That is positive pie in the sky thinking. Reality is not even close.Currently the electrical grid demand brought by electrical cars in California is about 1% of their output, so I have confidence people genuinely working on this issue can work the issues out long term. There's valid concerns about power distribution in rural areas, but that is a solvable issue.
Solar still sucks at any scale worth talking about, both in power density and longevity. It has hovered around 17% average for decades and premium panels may net you a bit more. But it they only work when the Sun is out. Storage of that power in batteries is both costly and inefficient (10% to20% loss depending on the system) due to transformation losses in both directions. But ignore that... Care to take a stab at the area of coverage needed to power a small town, let alone a city? One where the cars, ovens, heat, lawnmowers, and everything else are electric? Solar is nice on your house if the sun is out and the government helped pay for the panels... that is about it.especially in areas of active research. Solar power sucked until it didnt and the wattage generated per square foot has increased with investment in solar technology.
In the kindest way... it is not that we disagree, I simply don't think you have a full grasp of the scale of any of this. Most people don't.That's my 2c - I don't particularly want to do a drawn out back and forth and I'm sure the forum doesn't want it either, so it's OK if we disagree.
Because to date there is no fusion reactor known that produces more energy than it consumes. Solve that, and own the world. So if you want nuclear, fission it is.As ridiculous as this sounds. Why Not just create a working fusion reactor that can produce power instead of having to use solar panels.