DarkBlack
Elite Member
Here is my cost/kwh for the last 20 years
paul
You should plot it against inflation to make it easier to interpret the results.
Here is my cost/kwh for the last 20 years
paul
Just looked at my latest bill, .075/KWH...BUT, when you add taxes, surcharges, transmission costs, etc. it works out to .115/KWH.
A sail boat is a unique application.
The technology is sound, it is just a question of finalizing the charging specifications and economics. The charging specifications seem to be known but there are people running tests to verify the configurations. The economics side seems to already be in place due the superiority of LiFePo over lead acid. Having said that, batteries are still critical for an off the grid home solution and it is not clear to me that LiFEPo make money sense for a home solution. If the prices drop, I think it will make money sense for a dirt home and I think the prices will drop as LiFePo's start replacing lead acid batteries in boats.
Later,
Dan
I work in Aerospace, and battery technology has advanced amazingly in the past 3 decades!
There are many new types in the works, that will probably be on the civilian market someday.
When I first started, batteries were very heavy and had a short lifespan, measured in hours.
Nowadays, they're going for decades, and much, much lighter.
And lifting batteries into orbit costs millions!
Battery tech hasn't plateaued, it just takes time and money.
When anyone says that ANY technology has plateaued and can go no farther, I also think of the time the City of Dallas bought 2 IBM 360 computers in the early '70s and the experts assured us that would be all the computer the city would ever need.:laughing:[/QUOTE,
Your phone probably has more capability than that old iron 360. Back in the late 70's I was writing programs that had to fit into 8k of ram. Anything larger had to be written to disk and swapped back and forth. The DEC PDP-8 was the size of a regular refrigerator, and had a disk pack next to it that was almost as large.