
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Ford Canada, Unifor reach tentative deal that includes $2B in EV contracts
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
-
-
But afterwards there is going to be 1 or 2 four legged moneymakers running around! You gotta look on the bright side there fellas!
Comment
-
Let it be recorded that the reports o the two dual renewable grid tied "environmentally friendly" electrical energy output of solar and small scale consumer wind generation is at least 50% erroneous. The proof of that is that no CSA approved inverter equipment has been available from any reputable CSA supplier of those inverters for the last approx. 5 years for the Canadian electrical grid..
Tell me otherwise and its worth a lot of money. Grid tied wind is dead on the scale of KW's and tens of KW's.
Thus leaving the promoters of their backyard solar arrays working at 15% of their boiler plate photovoltaic boilerplate rating (optimistically).
And who would/could argue that any usable output occurs during "night", nor even the December/January short daylight hours.
So backyard wind generation was overhyped or western Canada as proven by the manufacturers decision to shelve all inv/verter availability some years ago; and Sask Power doesn't even now have a category for such wind generation.
And Chuck's bit of data of 35000 KWH's over 8760 hours gives almost exactly a claimed 4 KWh average output over a one year period. This is all cyclical intermittent power that must be backed up by baseline generation which arguably can never be provided by any reasonable combination of battery storage.
Now for those who might be interested in electrical grid tied generation from an energy source (known as carbon neutral) produced by a 6000 watt near identical inverter (though apparently current source firmware compared to voltage source firmware) capable of producing with 100% uptime and any desired output up to the inverter rated capacity.... the Sask Power net metering "rec" reading would and did increased from the first week of July 2020 to some 11,200 KWh up to before this last week end. Double check the figures with 83 days times 135 KWh / day . (where 5650 times 24 hours equals about 135 KWh per day
Uptime since commissioning was a few hours short of 100% due to a couple of reasons that are explainable. Instantaneous inverter readings of output don't stray from approx 5610 to 5670 watts; at a set output o 5650 watts;and the 6000 watt could be run at a 10% higher output if desired. It has been found that no component of the rectifier/inverter does reach even body temp.
If there is any use for the waste heat produced by the cogeneration system (and its not too offensive to those opposed to their natural gas space heating needs) then the efficiency of the carbon neutral fuel source just increases by a factor of at least two.
Now begin to compare a $625 McDougall Auction genset and what solar panels cost and a fuel source costlng comparable to sunlight cost; and same net metering grid tied setup; and uptimes expected o each and you will be able to determine how this is all liable to shake out. Now it would take some time to explain the additional regulatory hoops and patience and red tape that had to be addressed over a period o some years.But it's all gained some traction and apparently works exactly as the theory suggests it should. A larger 18KW 3 phase version is in fiinal stages of being connected.
And I predict that the statement I heard some months ago is dead on as to what the future holds.
I have heard if the Regina COOP Refinery were to close down then the Province of Sask would have to triple its electrical output to make up for the loss of energy available for uses now tied to the refinery products. Now remember that in the bigger scheme of things, a 100,000 barrel per day refinery is nothing but small potatoes.And so is Sask Electrical production. And just which small fraction of these small potatoes comes fro any Sask solar energy production.
BEWARE those who repeat the idea of quick charging batteries not designed for rapid charging as either safe or allowed; when such use is deliberately disabled in such situations by Tesla. And to place faith in any new battery living up to its hype sure when no one suggests any guaranteed delivery time; will not be safe to use without both having cooling and heating control; and can be counted on to be available and working about the same decade as the COVID-19 vaccine.
There's more to this than promoters know or are willing to admit.
Comment
-
Originally posted by oneoff View PostLet it be recorded that the reports o the two dual renewable grid tied "environmentally friendly" electrical energy output of solar and small scale consumer wind generation is at least 50% erroneous. The proof of that is that no CSA approved inverter equipment has been available from any reputable CSA supplier of those inverters for the last approx. 5 years for the Canadian electrical grid..
Tell me otherwise and its worth a lot of money. Grid tied wind is dead on the scale of KW's and tens of KW's.
Thus leaving the promoters of their backyard solar arrays working at 15% of their boiler plate photovoltaic boilerplate rating (optimistically).
And who would/could argue that any usable output occurs during "night", nor even the December/January short daylight hours.
So backyard wind generation was overhyped or western Canada as proven by the manufacturers decision to shelve all inv/verter availability some years ago; and Sask Power doesn't even now have a category for such wind generation.
And Chuck's bit of data of 35000 KWH's over 8760 hours gives almost exactly a claimed 4 KWh average output over a one year period. This is all cyclical intermittent power that must be backed up by baseline generation which arguably can never be provided by any reasonable combination of battery storage.
Now for those who might be interested in electrical grid tied generation from an energy source (known as carbon neutral) produced by a 6000 watt near identical inverter (though apparently current source firmware compared to voltage source firmware) capable of producing with 100% uptime and any desired output up to the inverter rated capacity.... the Sask Power net metering "rec" reading would and did increased from the first week of July 2020 to some 11,200 KWh up to before this last week end. Double check the figures with 83 days times 135 KWh / day . (where 5650 times 24 hours equals about 135 KWh per day
Uptime since commissioning was a few hours short of 100% due to a couple of reasons that are explainable. Instantaneous inverter readings of output don't stray from approx 5610 to 5670 watts; at a set output o 5650 watts;and the 6000 watt could be run at a 10% higher output if desired. It has been found that no component of the rectifier/inverter does reach even body temp.
If there is any use for the waste heat produced by the cogeneration system (and its not too offensive to those opposed to their natural gas space heating needs) then the efficiency of the carbon neutral fuel source just increases by a factor of at least two.
Now begin to compare a $625 McDougall Auction genset and what solar panels cost and a fuel source costlng comparable to sunlight cost; and same net metering grid tied setup; and uptimes expected o each and you will be able to determine how this is all liable to shake out. Now it would take some time to explain the additional regulatory hoops and patience and red tape that had to be addressed over a period o some years.But it's all gained some traction and apparently works exactly as the theory suggests it should. A larger 18KW 3 phase version is in fiinal stages of being connected.
And I predict that the statement I heard some months ago is dead on as to what the future holds.
I have heard if the Regina COOP Refinery were to close down then the Province of Sask would have to triple its electrical output to make up for the loss of energy available for uses now tied to the refinery products. Now remember that in the bigger scheme of things, a 100,000 barrel per day refinery is nothing but small potatoes.And so is Sask Electrical production. And just which small fraction of these small potatoes comes fro any Sask solar energy production.
BEWARE those who repeat the idea of quick charging batteries not designed for rapid charging as either safe or allowed; when such use is deliberately disabled in such situations by Tesla. And to place faith in any new battery living up to its hype sure when no one suggests any guaranteed delivery time; will not be safe to use without both having cooling and heating control; and can be counted on to be available and working about the same decade as the COVID-19 vaccine.
There's more to this than promoters know or are willing to admit.
Something meaningful and realistic to our part of the world
Comment
-
Originally posted by chuckChuck View PostDoesn't seem to be much celebrating about all the Ford jobs and EV contracts!
Is this is because the EV jobs don't fit with the narrative that the economy is "going to hell" because of EVs and renwewable energy?
All we hear is crickets.
Comment
-
Originally posted by tweety View PostGot some evidence for that?
Or evidence that the cost of a product is the sum of the labour required to create the product?
We don't just sacrifice $100 bills to appease the Lithium gods by throwing money into the Lithium mine, and they throw out batteries in return. We pay geologists, and exploration companies, and financiers, and equipment operators, and roughnecks and refinery workers, and truck drivers to provide the fuel to power the equipment to dig out, transport and process the minerals, we pay the entire chain of labourers who made the equipment, we pay the designers, and engineers, and marketers, and administrators, and regulators, and eventually, we pay the assembly line workers who actually build the car. And if there is anything left over, ( otherwise known as profit), we pay the owners, or shareholders to compensate them for the labor they exchanged for a piece of the company.
Now imagine if Ford were to move the mining, and processing, and manufacturing of those batteries and EV powertrains to North America, and meet NA environmental, safety, labour and regulatory standards, then pay NA union wages, what would be the true cost of the labor in the EV compared to the ICE?
Comment
-
Originally posted by tweety View PostThe labor cost of building an EV is much more then an ICE even though an EV is far less complex. Any evidence to that?
How do you account for the fact that the EV costs more? Do they just pay their employees more per hour?
Why do you believe an EV is less complex? Do you know much about winding motors? Or the chemistry of batteries? Less moving parts, does not mean less complex, or less cost. It may eventually, but so far it is not.Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Sep 27, 2020, 23:38.
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment