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(17.05.2012 01:48:13)
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(14.05.2012 18:26:01)
I'm thinkin' that the claim of a solar panel pyanig for itself environmentally after three years is calculated using the optimum possible circumstance as a model. My last two years in California were spent totally off the grid, with 180 watts of solar panels and two battery banks, one bank of four Trojan T-105 deep cycle 6 volters, and a backup of four 6-volt golf cart batteries, with about half the amp hours of the Trojans. I was constantly running my generator (I lived in a 20' camp trailer and used electric solely for lights, fan, radio, a 13 inch flat screen TV, and a Playstation II, which severed as game platform as well as CD and DVD player), and that was in sunny California. If I had solar panels here in SW Washington State, they would not last long enough to pay for themselves. No way, no how. Solar panels can be broken. If exposed to the elements (and show me ones that aren't) they become opaque and lose efficiency. To be even remotely efficient they require solar trackers (something I've yet to see on large arrays, like the one used to supply supplemental power to the Butte County government offices in Oroville, Ca.), the manufacture of which has costs both monetarily and environmentally. Then figure in all the other equipment necessary. You just don't plug a DC solar panel into your AC household current. As for Cash for Clunkers, sure people traded in somewhat efficient cars a few years old for slightly newer and slightly more efficient cars, but then what? The government destroys the perfectly usable and relatively efficient trade ins, meaning people in the market for a newer used car must now continue to drive their smokin' old '72 Buick for another 2 years. Stupid is as stupid does. The government should stop subsidizing, and instead offer incentives. I think geothermal has promise, and if the couple of problems currently plaguing it can be figured out ?
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With the bases laeodd you struck us out with that answer!
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