Is there anybody creating devices to store energy out there.

Old Rocks

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Tesla has done quite well in residential energy storage. The Tesla power wall.
 
Those last how long? Like an hour or two? Wind and solar are a farce, you need baseline production, coal, NG nuclear, hydro.

Using solar and wind with every expensive batteries that give you a few hours backup means you still need baseline generation, meaning a duplicate or in fact a triplicate power system, meaning rate payers get crushed.
 
One of the constant themes of the deniers is that solar and wind don't work because of lack of energy storage. In other words, it gets dark and sometimes the wind does not blow. So are there companies that create energy storage devices? Enough of them to satisfy residential and larger installations? Here are a few;


Your vast yawning chasm of cluelessness is evident here as it doesn't have 24/7 baseline thus UNRELIABLE and back up storage doesn't have the capacity and economics to make it work.

The Twilight Zone fantasy continues while the many examples of failures have been accumulating.....

You people so deficient in understanding how power grids work................
 
Which can't run long enough to matter on the following, Dryer, Heater, Water Heater, Stove not worth the money much cheaper to get a backup generator instead.
Depends how big a wall you get. I know people who just use solar with Tesla. With no sun it will run a whole house for a cloudy week.
 
One of the constant themes of the deniers is that solar and wind don't work because of lack of energy storage. In other words, it gets dark and sometimes the wind does not blow. So are there companies that create energy storage devices? Enough of them to satisfy residential and larger installations? Here are a few;

I am called a denier, proudly so. I want you hostile people to stop trying to frighten Americans to death. You have kept this up since Clinton was in office and nothing you predicted took place.
 
One of the constant themes of the deniers is that solar and wind don't work because of lack of energy storage. In other words, it gets dark and sometimes the wind does not blow. So are there companies that create energy storage devices? Enough of them to satisfy residential and larger installations? Here are a few;

Nice Spam. Would you like some Spam to go with that Spam?

 
One of the constant themes of the deniers is that solar and wind don't work because of lack of energy storage.
Old Crock as stupid as they come, no old crock solar and wind dont work cause they are too inefficient.

Nobody makes the argument that they just need an Energizer bunny.

Old Crock is so stupid
 
excalibur
Depends how big a wall you get. I know people who just use solar with Tesla. With no sun it will run a whole house for a cloudy week.
No, you know nobody running on solar.

All solar home installations connect to the grid. Solar homes are powered by the grid, with or without a battery.

Of course less than 1% of solar homes are off the grid. But in this thread we speak of suburban solar
 
excalibur

No, you know nobody running on solar.

All solar home installations connect to the grid. Solar homes are powered by the grid, with or without a battery.

Of course less than 1% of solar homes are off the grid. But in this thread we speak of suburban solar
Yes. Everything is connected to the grid. Because it is all monitored.
 
15th post

Is there anybody creating devices to store energy out there.​


My patent should be coming through any day now.

IMG_6045.webp
 
Those last how long? Like an hour or two? Wind and solar are a farce, you need baseline production, coal, NG nuclear, hydro.

Using solar and wind with every expensive batteries that give you a few hours backup means you still need baseline generation, meaning a duplicate or in fact a triplicate power system, meaning rate payers get crushed.
Oh my, what idiocy we see here. Average home uses about 29 kw/hr per day. Most of that during the day. So a couple of Powerwall 3, which store 11.5 kw/hr AC per battery, would be enough to power your home over the night. In case of a grid failure, using only the necessary items in the home you could get by indefinitely with just two of them.

The average U.S. home uses approximately 10,500 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity per year, which translates to about 29 kWh per day. This average can vary based on factors such as home size, location, and energy efficiency.
https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=7dfc...S9lbGVjdHJpY2l0eS11c2UtaW4taG9tZXMucGhw&ntb=1
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)+1

The Goldendale Pumped Hydro project will store enough water to supply 500,000 homes with power for 12 hours. And there are many other ways of storing electrical energy. You really need to quit standing in the horse turds by the side of the road, yelling, "Get a horse". LOL
 
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