mjrpes3
Golden Member
speculation is that the fuel is natural gas or biomass.
natural gas is not speculation. that is what they currently run. but the concept apparently works for other types of fuel including biomass.
speculation is that the fuel is natural gas or biomass.
Bloom Energy == worthless as indicated by there information less web site.
our government gets way more funding than that yet it too knows how to put out a good vaporware product.yea well i remember last time 60 minutes had a thing on an indian mechanic dude that claimed he got magic fuel efficiency from a differently shaped cylinder head or something..that came to nothing.
though this bloom thing is getting a lot more funding. so we'll see.
I can believe that based on thermodynamics. I'm guessing they use diesel?
yea well i remember last time 60 minutes had a thing on an indian mechanic dude that claimed he got magic fuel efficiency from a differently shaped cylinder head or something..that came to nothing.
though this bloom thing is getting a lot more funding. so we'll see.
R35 in the walls???? How the hell would you accomplish that!? The insulation batts you put in the walls at the moment are like R7 and you can't just stuff a bunch of those in order to increase the R value because that's not how insulation works. Now R35 I can see for a ceiling but for walls?? Also a lot of the heat is lost through windows.Let's look at eBay's example. They bought five boxes at a cost of $700K-800K each. So, they spent at least $3.5 Million and in 9 months saved $100K. Without taking tax credits into consideration, the ROI is +25 years. With tax credits in consideration, maybe 12-13 years.
Now let's look at the inventor's price-point for a home model. He thinks the cost would need to be around $3K. Ok, but like eBay's model it requires FUEL. Also, why $3K? Why not embed the cost (say, $15K) into that of the mortgage and treat it like a furnace instead of a leather sofa.
And what exactly are the byproducts of the fuel being consumed. He provides natural gas as an example fuel. There's got to be byproducts. While I am skeptical regarding the residentual application, I am more wondering if the costs couldn't be put elsewhere.
For instance, how about we move away from the 1973 energy policy and start requiring all homes to have R35 insulation in the walls, and R50 in the roof/ceiling? This can be achieved with open/closed cell spray-on foam solutions that have been around for decades.
Now, lower the environmental energy consumption due to that 3-5X insulating benefits and you dramatically reduce environmental operating costs (heating and cooling).
R35 in the walls???? How the hell would you accomplish that!? The insulation batts you put in the walls at the moment are like R7 and you can't just stuff a bunch of those in order to increase the R value because that's not how insulation works. Now R35 I can see for a ceiling but for walls?? Also a lot of the heat is lost through windows.
I'm going strictly off of this wiki article:Facepalm...
Yet another fleabag quote.
Most if not all REQUIRE at least R13 in the wall already. Not sure where you got the R7 from.
I am doing a R25 in walls I am building right now.
"High-density fiberglass batts 0360 R-3.6 (0.63) 0500 R-5 (0.88)
I'm going strictly off of this wiki article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulation_value#Example_values
Sorry, R5...
I'm going strictly off of this wiki article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulation_value#Example_values
Sorry, R5...
A fuel cell that's main component is baked sand coated with ink. If the claims are true and they can get the costs of these reasonable, this definitely has potential.
There are still some unknowns for sure, but the ability to generate electricity silently and directly onsite using biofuel, solar, wind, natural gas or 12,000 hamster wheels..
what exactly constitutes a big breakthrough?
We were going to implement one too. But then we realized that the buttered cat needed food (fuel). The cost of the fuel isn't too bad. But, have you ever tried to feed a hovering cat which is rotating at 60 Hz? After three technicians had their hands severely bitten, we cancelled that plan. I wanted to add gears to it so that the cat could rotate slower than 60 Hz, but apparantly that isn't a feasible reality. You can't slow down the cat-toast phenomenon. How did you get around it? I think an engine that runs off of water may help, but I'm stumped so far.We run our datacenter here on a massive buttered cat array.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttered_cat_paradox
Mmm... solid state fuel cell that splits hydrocarbons into water and CO2.