Originally posted by: K1052
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Unfortunately, you never know when or where a bolt of lightning will strike.
*uncrumples piece of paper from pocket*
We do now.
^^^ Winnar.
Originally posted by: K1052
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Unfortunately, you never know when or where a bolt of lightning will strike.
*uncrumples piece of paper from pocket*
We do now.
Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
Originally posted by: theplaidfad
When the tornado finally gets tired of years of servitude, it WILL escape and destroy us all.
I for one welcome our new angry tornado overlords.
Someone had to say it.
Originally posted by: Gothgar
Originally posted by: theplaidfad
Originally posted by: vhx
Because lightning strikes are random. You could technically make a giant field of huge spires for a bigger chance of getting something hit by lightning, but to be more efficient they would have to be really tall (more expensive).
I was actually reading in the July issue of Popular Science that Louis Michaud has found a way of creating a Tornado and then entrapping it but keeping it spinning indefinitely. The article said he showed a prototype last year (a smaller model) but is going for a bigger one. If it's true it could definitely be a constant source of energy. It requires power to first start it says, but once it is going it is self sustainable using turbines and stuff. It also says one would be enough to power 200,000 homes.
When the tornado finally gets tired of years of servitude, it WILL escape and destroy us all.
/obligatory I for one welcome our new tornado overlords.
Originally posted by: So
Wind is "free" too, but oh, wait! It turns out that wind power is more expensive than coal! How can that be? What? Infrastructure costs money? You must be joking!
I know, let's spend billions on R&D in hopes that someone invents a capacitor that is cheap enough to even come close to being affordable at that size, and if it doesn't work out we're screwed.
Or we could just build a few light water reactors and go to bed secure in our (extremely cheap) energy supplies.
Originally posted by: NL5
Originally posted by: JLee
Funny how technology changes.![]()
Funny how the laws of physics don't.
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
Although it's a lot of power, it's for a very short time. 1 million watts for 0.1 second=28kWh. About enough to power an average house for a day.
Originally posted by: vhx
Because lightning strikes are random. You could technically make a giant field of huge spires for a bigger chance of getting something hit by lightning, but to be more efficient they would have to be really tall (more expensive).
I was actually reading in the July issue of Popular Science that Louis Michaud has found a way of creating a Tornado and then entrapping it but keeping it spinning indefinitely. The article said he showed a prototype last year (a smaller model) but is going for a bigger one. If it's true it could definitely be a constant source of energy. It requires power to first start it says, but once it is going it is self sustainable using turbines and stuff. It also says one would be enough to power 200,000 homes.
Originally posted by: vhx
Because lightning strikes are random. You could technically make a giant field of huge spires for a bigger chance of getting something hit by lightning, but to be more efficient they would have to be really tall (more expensive).
I was actually reading in the July issue of Popular Science that Louis Michaud has found a way of creating a Tornado and then entrapping it but keeping it spinning indefinitely. The article said he showed a prototype last year (a smaller model) but is going for a bigger one. If it's true it could definitely be a constant source of energy. It requires power to first start it says, but once it is going it is self sustainable using turbines and stuff. It also says one would be enough to power 200,000 homes.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Unfortunately, you never know when or where a bolt of lightning will strike.
Religious leaders second.Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Unfortunately, you never know when or where a bolt of lightning will strike.
And if we did, the military would want first dibs.
