Melbourne is south of Sinney, right, so it'd be all down hill, so should be a piece of cake, however Mel -Sinney would be a challenge all being up hill.
Would the ex Member for 'Buggered up Broadband' even know?
when wind n solar farms run out, what do they get replaced with?
remember that both have a shorter lifespan than fossil fuel stations.
also home solar only has a 30% penetration rate in aust homes. some quick maths tells me that means 70% of houses will need to draw from the grid
Current Cars:
2013 E3 Maloo, 350kw
2008 RRS, TDV8
1995 VS Clubsport
Previous Cars:
2008 ML63, V8
2002 VY SS Ute, 300kw
2002 Disco 2, LS1 conversion
Melbourne is south of Sinney, right, so it'd be all down hill, so should be a piece of cake, however Mel -Sinney would be a challenge all being up hill.
Would the ex Member for 'Buggered up Broadband' even know?
 Fossicker
					
					
						Fossicker
					
					
                                        
					
					
						And out of that 30%,I wonder how many have the capacity to charge one or two EV’s every night?
And run the house?
Very few no doubt.
We are many,many years away from relying on solar power to reliably supply power even for domestic use,let alone charge vehicles as well as industrial use.
EVs can be charged from any power point, but higher capacity chargers costing about $2000 make it happen faster.
The EV batteries can be wired to become part of the house power system. Batteries are charged during the day and run the house at night. About 6-7 kW of solar panels and a similar battery capacity is all a typical house needs.
A lot of solar can be packed onto project roofs. Our son's new 6.5 kW of solar panels which are wired to run his newly renovated house first and export the surplus to the grid are already earning him $5 a day in power credits, so as long as they use less than $5 a day in power, they are in credit. And his panels don't take up a lot of space - they would fit on a townhouse roof.
If not enough on- site power is generated, apartment projects can actually sign deals with solar and wind generation companies to buy their power from a remote farm. Some businesses already do this.
Why don't you stop raising false objections and just realise this is the way we're going and it's not a future thing, it's already here?
most people set an alarm clock and wake up in the morning.
mick on the other hand is still in dream land.
Current Cars:
2013 E3 Maloo, 350kw
2008 RRS, TDV8
1995 VS Clubsport
Previous Cars:
2008 ML63, V8
2002 VY SS Ute, 300kw
2002 Disco 2, LS1 conversion
 Wizard
					
					
						Subscriber
					
					
						Wizard
					
					
						SubscriberSo to do this the average human family has to:
Pay for solar panels and batteries +-$7k (yes I know the power bill would then be smaller but we also have to pay for maintenance and power on rainy days etc)
Pay for a fast charger ‘cos the car needs to be charged in 8hrs- $2k
Pay for the EV - cheapest is currently $40k
Replace EV and house batteries every 6 (?) years say allow $3k per year
Total outlay for somebody with no electrical or mechanical knowledge is about $50k up front, just to do exactly what we are doing now albeit saving the world?.
All of this so that we can travel in a tiny car a max of 400km per day and we can’t go out of the cities because there aren’t any charging stations out there. I’m sure they’ll find a way to make us pay for those as well.
Sounds like a plan, not a very good plan, but a plan.
Phil B
Custodian of:
1974 S3 swb wagon (sold)
1978 S3 swb canvas
48 749 '88 4x4 Perentie
1985 County with 4BD1T
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