Inspector
Nyuck, Nyuck, Nyuck!
Okay I missed the part where we went from wind power to water power.
Pete
Pete
It's just another fluid. Only a bit wetterOkay I missed the part where we went from wind power to water power.
Pete
Turbines operate best offshore where they are relatively unaffected by turbulence from hills, building etc. The larger they are they better the chance of them being in an uninterrupted airflow.
Small land based turbines suffer from turbulence and ground effects. If taller to minimise this, the cost of the tower relative to output becomes uneconomic. They may be useful for very remotes locations but noise and vibration makes them unsuited to urban settings.
Contrast with solar - roof mounted panels are easily absorbed into an urban environment, although output ceases at sunset.
Governments may be very happy that people are encouraged to install their own generation but I seriously wonder whether is makes real sense - is it better to adorn 250 rooftops to generate 1MW each year, or fill a single large field with several thousand PVs.
In aggregate the output may be the same, but I would intuitively expect the investment and running cost to be very different with economies of scale on PV procurement, installation and maintenance.
At least some of California here does that. The tiers pretty much create the boundary where heavy users will seek solar contracts instead of just buying.
I recall a member on another forum saying about 10 years ago that their bill went to $700 a month when the tiered system started, and they didn't want panels or something for various reasons.
Well, tough, get them, anyway, if you want to use that much, or invest in a solar farm. California is a perfect case for solar in areas that aren't right in a bay where there's a mist. Cold weather in the south is uncommon and consumption pretty much parallels the sun.
Trouble with permitting and local government there, though, in terms of getting anything at all done, but that's not exclusive to southern CA in the US. And then a few states over and if you want to build a jungle gym and put panels on it in your front yard entirely DIY, no trouble. But that's the US.
Wait till you get further along the thread were on to solar next weeks installment Wave Power.Okay I missed the part where we went from wind power to water power.
Pete
Turbines operate best offshore where they are relatively unaffected by turbulence from hills, building etc. The larger they are they better the chance of them being in an uninterrupted airflow.
Small land based turbines suffer from turbulence and ground effects. If taller to minimise this, the cost of the tower relative to output becomes uneconomic. They may be useful for very remotes locations but noise and vibration makes them unsuited to urban settings.
Contrast with solar - roof mounted panels are easily absorbed into an urban environment, although output ceases at sunset.
Governments may be very happy that people are encouraged to install their own generation but I seriously wonder whether is makes real sense - is it better to adorn 250 rooftops to generate 1MW each year, or fill a single large field with several thousand PVs.
In aggregate the output may be the same, but I would intuitively expect the investment and running cost to be very different with economies of scale on PV procurement, installation and maintenance.
Wait till you get further along the thread were on to solar next weeks installment Wave Power.
Hydrogen can be added to natural gas, and if it is a low proportion existing cookers and boilers (furnaces) can be used without modification. I think it is quite a bit less than 20%, If I recall correctly less than 10%. They are selling boilers now that can use a higher portion of hydrogen.some initiative to include 20% hydrogen in gas generation?
Told you Pete just got the day wrongSweden seems to be in the lead with installed wave energy.
Hydrogen can be added to natural gas, and if it is a low proportion existing cookers and boilers (furnaces) can be used without modification. I think it is quite a bit less than 20%, If I recall correctly less than 10%. They are selling boilers now that can use a higher portion of hydrogen.
It is a good way of making use of unwanted solar and wind, turn it into hydrogen, which stores the electricity, and burn it latter. Better to just use the electricity if it is need there and then but if not its seems like a good idea. Germany has been injecting hydrogen into there natural gas in some cities for a few years, I assume as test projects.
But it's mine so I can tell all the neighbours I'm GREEN!!!Retro fitting solar panels on small roofs is bound to be expensive. No economies of scale in the installation and less chance to fine tune the components.
It should get slightly better for residential when solar is fitted as buildings are built.
Retro fitting solar panels on small roofs is bound to be expensive. No economies of scale in the installation and less chance to fine tune the components.
It should get slightly better for residential when solar is fitted as buildings are built.
@D_W We do not have zoning in the UK. Local government make a development plan but it is not set in stone (somebody can correct me if I am wrong).
Every development is decided on its own merits, which does mean that you can not be sure what will be accepted but anything reasonable could in theory. You could build an office building (maybe a small factory) in a residential area if it blended in and would not disturb the neigbours with traffic, parking issues, noise and fumes. If the building is in a historic area it will be a lot harder and more expensive to comply with the requirements but you could build an office building next to a four hundred year one if the outside matched.
You would be able to install your own panels if you got the required permissions and inspections. Things like electrics require a qualifications to make the conections and final inspections. But you could pull all the cable, fix cabinets etc (all the labour jobs) and the qualified electrician does all the connections.
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