MIT report "The Future of Solar Energy"

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  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by bberry
    These modern "road trains" are not attached trucks. The robot trucks follow the lead truck at about 30 feet distance. One human is required to drive port to port in the lead truck over the interstate. The loads are then picked up for the last local delivery stage by human drivers.

    The "robot trucks" aren't smart enough to handle local roads.

    Most truck drivers want to be employed in local delivery anyways, not over the road.
    Are these robot trucks "fact" or still on the proverbial drawing board?

    While there are a few autonomous cars being tested there is still a lot of work to do before they become a common site let alone a "convoy" of robot trucks.

    Leave a comment:


  • russ
    replied
    Originally posted by bberry
    These modern "road trains" are not attached trucks. The robot trucks follow the lead truck at about 30 feet distance. One human is required to drive port to port in the lead truck over the interstate. The loads are then picked up for the last local delivery stage by human drivers.

    The "robot trucks" aren't smart enough to handle local roads.

    Most truck drivers want to be employed in local delivery anyways, not over the road.
    Where do you come up with this stuff?

    Leave a comment:


  • DanKegel
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    Most crime is not reported.
    Most violent crime probably is, though, don't you think?

    Leave a comment:


  • bberry
    replied
    Originally posted by SunEagle

    As for future "road trains", most roadways aren't designed for vehicles that are real heavy and for safety are limited to double trailers only. Making them longer and heavier would make it impossible to use them on most roads.
    These modern "road trains" are not attached trucks. The robot trucks follow the lead truck at about 30 feet distance. One human is required to drive port to port in the lead truck over the interstate. The loads are then picked up for the last local delivery stage by human drivers.

    The "robot trucks" aren't smart enough to handle local roads.

    Most truck drivers want to be employed in local delivery anyways, not over the road.

    Leave a comment:


  • bberry
    replied
    Originally posted by Sunking
    There is no replacement for diesel fuel in heavy transportation and aerospace. Light Rail can use electricity, but not freight. Planes and space craft i sout of the question, they must use diesel or high energy density fuels. Heavy trucking require diesel. Only large marine shipping can use electricity generated by nuclear power.

    Well planes and space craft can use nuclear.

    I will say this though. Americans are stupid for not using diesel fueled autos.
    Compressed natural gas is only 20% less energy dense than diesel. There's no land or water based form of transportation where CNG/LNG can't work well. The commercial transporter uses diesel today as the most cost effective fuel in existing equipment. You can buy a CNG truck today.

    Diesel is best for constant RPM applications. Even light commercial trucks have moved to gas engines for lower life cycle cost. Diesel may be economic in cars where it is not regulated for particulate emissions. Diesel engines produced in the U.S. before 2006 were great performers, and great polluters. But cars were still not a great application for an engine like diesel that has a limited RPM range of operation.

    Locomotives are electric motor driven anyways. It just a question of where and how the electricity is produced. There's no fundamental requirement in a locomotive for the energy density of diesel.

    Leave a comment:


  • DanKegel
    replied
    Originally posted by SunEagle
    It is true that more smaller delivery vehicles are starting to use natural gas or electric. I still don't think the long distance haulers (18 wheelers) will be changing out their diesel engines with a different fuel source engine any time soon.
    Yeah. Delivery (with lots of braking and acceleration) seems like a natural place to look for efficiency gains.

    e.g. one company is making drop-in replacement power trains that add regenerative braking and use a diesel-driven turbine, supposedly more than doubling fuel efficiency, with a payback time of ~5 years:
    Wrightspeed Powertrains of San Jose, California is a pioneer in developing hybrid-electric powertrains for heavy duty trucks. This next-generation design provides superior power, performance, fuel efficiency, and the lowest emissions for heavy duty trucks that operate in some of the most challenging and fuel-guzzling applications. There are many advantages to hybrid-electric vehicles that are beginning to be appreciated by the auto industry and Wrightspeed is at the cutting edge of this new engineering paradigm. Wrightspeed builds powertrain retrofits for existing trucks that replace the engine, transmission and driveshaft with electric motors, plug-in batteries, regenerative braking, and a turbine generator. The performance offered is unparalled in conventional trucks, with direct traction control at drivewheels, constant horsepower for heavy torque demand, slip limiting technology, and the emissions eclipse the strictest air quality mandates. In the Wrightspeed powertrain, multiple electric motors are powered by a battery bank which is charged from either a plug when parked, a range extending turbine generator, or the regenerative braking. Depending on the driving style, impressive gains in fuel economy can be seen. Driving patterns that involve a lot of stops and starts, such as garbage trucks and delivery vans that normally have very low fuel economy, can generate significant amounts of power from the regen brakes while also saving wear and tear on brake pads. For example, the Isuzu NPR, a common delivery truck averages 12 mpg with traditional diesel engine when driving around a city. The same truck retrofitted with the Wrightspeed system was measured at 44 mpg, similar to a Toyota Camry Hybrid’s highway EPA figure, and a 300-percent improvement. The Capstone microturbine generator is very clean, efficient, and quiet. It is only used to charge the batteries and is operated at its peak performance rate at all times allowing it to be very fuel efficient. Normal engines will range from low rpm idling to high speed at other times which creates inefficiencies in fuel use and bad emissions. The microturbine can operate on multiple fuels, mainly diesel or natural gas, and has much cleaner emissions than comparable piston engines without needing any exhaust aftertreatment.  The turbine has only one moving part and needs no lubrication or cooling and is low maintenance. Wrightspeed was founded by Ian Wright in 2011. Wright was one of the original co-founders of Tesla Motors but he left to pursue his own design vision. Back in 2005 Wright built the X1 concept electric car, which is still the fastest street legal electric car in the world that delivers 0-60 mph in 2.9 seconds and 170 mpg equivalent (watch this video to see the X1 beat a NASCAR racer and a Lamborghini head to head). Wrightspeed is only manufacturing powertrains for truck retrofits, and staying away from manufacturing entire vehicles. The company has three products: the Route™, a Range-extended Electric Vehicle (REV) powertrain retrofit for Class 3-6 trucks; the Route HD™, a heavy duty REV powertrain for Class 7-8 trucks; and the Circuit™, with four electric motors for supercars. Watch Ian Wright drive one of his trucks through the Bonneville Salt Flats. Wrightspeed’s main markets now are delivery trucks and garbage trucks. These trucks that have a lot of stops and starts and high fuel consumption offer a very compelling economic case for electrification. Where an average family car might only burn 600 gallons of fuel a year, a garbage truck can consume 14,000 gallons a year. A typical garbage truck might travel 130 miles a day with a thousand hard stops at 2.8 miles per gallon of fuel. A Wrightspeed retrofit for the heavy duty platform costs around $200,000 but can save $35,000 per year in fuel and $20,000 in maintenance (much of that in brakes) which means 4-5 years to pay off the investment. Wrightspeed has a backlog of orders and recently announced they are moving to a new factory that will allow them to expand. Wrightspeed holds most of the IP for its powertrains, including patent-pending controls, inverter, electric motor, two speed gear box with clutch-less shifting, battery pack, battery management system, and LCD user interface. Among the inventions Wrightspeed has created is a clutchless gear shifting mechanism called Geared Traction Drive which uses sophisticated computer controls to synchronize high speed gear shifting. Their proprietary motor weighs only 70 pounds and delivers 250 horsepower, among the best power to weight ratios found in any motor. Wrightspeed also uses very strong regenerative braking that can completely stop a truck on an incline and delivers 730kw of power back to the batteries. The lithium iron phosphate batteries are provided by A123 Batteries. Wright’s design philosophy is to have the truck drive like a normal truck with no training needed for the driver. The only difference the driver should see is that the truck is quieter, less smelly, and the driver uses brake pedal less. Ian Wright said, “We have had very good responses from the market. We do not see a lot of competition, we have the only range extended EV power train for medium and heavy duty trucks, we have the only repower kits you can buy, and the only turbine range extender. It’s pretty lonely out here which is great.”

    Leave a comment:


  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by bberry
    Converting heavy transport to coal based electric wouldn't make much sense either. But there is no reason locomotives couldn't be natural gas powered. Also, delivery likely changes with more autonomous vehicles. The shortage of over the road truckers is pushing the "road train" concept, where the human is only in the first truck. Changing power type is more likely when it coincides with redesigning fundamental aspects of transport.

    Solar already works for some business types in some locations. It probably works even better with batteries at $250/kwh.

    It is difficult to see how diesel will be replaced in farming and construction. But diesel is pretty much dead for local deliveries vehicles. I wonder what kilowatts are needed per day for a UPS truck?

    None of this happens fast without a policy of carbon reduction. Especially in the U.S., with all of our petrochemicals.
    It is true that more smaller delivery vehicles are starting to use natural gas or electric. I still don't think the long distance haulers (18 wheelers) will be changing out their diesel engines with a different fuel source engine any time soon.

    As for future "road trains", most roadways aren't designed for vehicles that are real heavy and for safety are limited to double trailers only. Making them longer and heavier would make it impossible to use them on most roads.

    I just don't see the transition happening any faster with or without a "carbon reduction" policy. Pushing companies to change quickly usually drives them out of business and then the FEDS have to throw money at them to prop them back up.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sunking
    replied
    Most crime is not reported.

    Leave a comment:


  • DanKegel
    replied
    I suppose you think crime in the U.S. has increased too since your youth.
    Originally posted by russ
    You don't? I really don't think anyone can be that dumb.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_the_United_States seems to agree that crime has fallen recently; it points to
    http://blogs.berkeley.edu/2010/06/16...es-in-america/ for some historical context.

    ( One theory is that violent crime rose and fell as a result of the introduction and then phaseout of leaded gasoline 20 years earlier:


    though the evidence that lead exposure itself accounts for the changes is weak:
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18413435 )

    But http://www.gallup.com/poll/150464/am...worsening.aspx says that polls show most Americans believe crime is getting worse.

    Could be a case of "if it bleeds, it leads", i.e. violent crime gets more attention in the media than lack of violent crime, who knows.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sunking
    replied
    Originally posted by bberry
    It is difficult to see how diesel will be replaced in farming and construction. But diesel is pretty much dead for local deliveries vehicles. I wonder what kilowatts are needed per day for a UPS truck?
    There is no replacement for diesel fuel in heavy transportation and aerospace. Light Rail can use electricity, but not freight. Planes and space craft i sout of the question, they must use diesel or high energy density fuels. Heavy trucking require diesel. Only large marine shipping can use electricity generated by nuclear power.

    Well planes and space craft can use nuclear.

    I will say this though. Americans are stupid for not using diesel fueled autos.

    Leave a comment:


  • bberry
    replied
    Originally posted by SunEagle
    Electric driven heavy transport (about 95% of how products get to the store) is not going to happen for decades so diesel fuel will still be required.

    As for using "cheap" renewable power 24/7... I may live to see that happen but seriously doubt it since the US uses gigawatts of power at night.

    Also just about all types of chemical cleaners and plastics products require petrol in some version to be manufactured. So unfortunately America will still be dependent on fossil fuels for many years.
    Converting heavy transport to coal based electric wouldn't make much sense either. But there is no reason locomotives couldn't be natural gas powered. Also, delivery likely changes with more autonomous vehicles. The shortage of over the road truckers is pushing the "road train" concept, where the human is only in the first truck. Changing power type is more likely when it coincides with redesigning fundamental aspects of transport.

    Solar already works for some business types in some locations. It probably works even better with batteries at $250/kwh.

    It is difficult to see how diesel will be replaced in farming and construction. But diesel is pretty much dead for local deliveries vehicles. I wonder what kilowatts are needed per day for a UPS truck?

    None of this happens fast without a policy of carbon reduction. Especially in the U.S., with all of our petrochemicals.

    Leave a comment:


  • DanKegel
    replied
    Originally posted by Amy@altE
    The problem with investing in R&D is that not all ideas being researched and developed are viable. So if the government backs the wrong horse, and not 100% of projects move forward, then they are forever dragged through the mud for "wasting tax payer dollars". Not all investments are winners, and unless people can accept that some will succeed and some will fail, investing in R&D will be a target. ... And yes, I remember Evergreen Solar very very well. They were from my home town, I knew a lot of the engineers, I sold a lot of their panels, and lost a bit of money in their stock. But I don't judge the whole industry because their innovative panels couldn't compete with the heavily gov't subsidized Chinese panels that flooded the market.
    Venture capital funds back a number of startups, fully expecting that many of them will fail. What matters is whether they get a good return on their investments as a whole.
    The DOE funded some winners, too, and got its money back, according to http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/...0IX0A120141113
    That same program is said to be funding two nuclear reactors ( http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...ost-from-feds/ ) for similar reasons - worthy projects too risky to succeed without help.

    What killed Evergreen? It was a brutal time for solar, but according to http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...res-the-ticker, their fundamental bet was that polysilicon would stay expensive, so the key to profitability was to use lots less of it. That turned out to be wrong. So the lesson from both Evergreen and Solyndra might be "it's risky to bet the farm that an expensive commodity will stay expensive".

    Leave a comment:


  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by russ
    All very correct - the RE will replace hydrocarbon fuels bunch have zero idea how much electricity is really used.

    The day any large power hungry industry such as a smelter or refiner runs off solar will happen - in the year 2525
    Wasn't there a song titled "in the year 2525"?

    Leave a comment:


  • russ
    replied
    Originally posted by SunEagle
    Electric driven heavy transport (about 95% of how products get to the store) is not going to happen for decades so diesel fuel will still be required.

    As for using "cheap" renewable power 24/7... I may live to see that happen but seriously doubt it since the US uses gigawatts of power at night.

    Also just about all types of chemical cleaners and plastics products require petrol in some version to be manufactured. So unfortunately America will still be dependent on fossil fuels for many years.
    All very correct - the RE will replace hydrocarbon fuels bunch have zero idea how much electricity is really used.

    The day any large power hungry industry such as a smelter or refiner runs off solar will happen - in the year 2525

    Leave a comment:


  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by solar_future
    The US GDP has increased in that time period, it is just that the Chinese has been growing faster. US living standards will increase the future, which is what matters. Who cares if the USA has less geopolitical power. The control of resources will be less important to economic well being in the future. We are on the verge of cheap power renewable power provided from the sun and wind. Electric cars will cheaper than gasoline cars in a few years, which mean that America won't be dependent of petrol anymore.
    Electric driven heavy transport (about 95% of how products get to the store) is not going to happen for decades so diesel fuel will still be required.

    As for using "cheap" renewable power 24/7... I may live to see that happen but seriously doubt it since the US uses gigawatts of power at night.

    Also just about all types of chemical cleaners and plastics products require petrol in some version to be manufactured. So unfortunately America will still be dependent on fossil fuels for many years.

    Leave a comment:

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