savageactor7 said:Pretty good deal...what this country needs though is a way to produce a Prius for 15k so everyone manufacturers, workers and environment profit.
EatenByLimestone said:So, reading into this, how can we calculate how long it would take to charge a 12 volt battery with a 3kw generator? Appearantly the inefficiencies of storing the energy and converting it are less than running the generator full time and not having the need for the power. Granted a freezer and woodstove fan do not use much power.
Matt
meathead said:Pretty good stuff
jdemaris said:Seems a bit silly to me, unless you've already got the Prius and no other means of making power.
jdemaris said:That article states "a bargain and a real smart grid solution."
That is a bit ridiculous. A bargain? There's not a hybrid on the road that, overall, that is as cost-effective as a conventional gas-engine or diesel car. They have the illusion of being different and better due to hype and government support. Take into account the production, maintanence, and disposal costs and they are much more wasteful than other types of vehicles. Then, on top of that - to decribe it as a "bargain" in the context of using it as a 3000 watt generator? Just plain stupid. I'm not saying stupid to use it, if you already happen to own one. I'm saying the article is dumb. As to paying the price for a Hybrid? If the government wasn't involved, and they were sold by true-market values, and expenses, I doubt you'd ever see one again.
meathead said:He burned 5 gallons of fuel modestly powering his home for 3 days. You know of a generator capable of that that costs less than a prius?
jdemaris said:It's kind of hard to tell, sitting at a computer screen if you are serious, being silly, etc.
The guy with the Prius was using a very expensive car, with a very expensive battery bank - as a 3000 wat DC generator. You can buy a new genest for $200, and a $500 battery bank and accompish the same thing. Granted , you also need an inverter - but so did the guy with the Prius. Nothing particularly impressive about his fuel consumption. You can do as well and better with a portable inverter generator.
jdemaris said:And, about your call for electric cars? That electricity has to come from somewhere. As of yet, we haven't found too many "free" energy sources. Most have their price, one way or the other. As a society, we tend to think and act short-term, and constantly "rob Peter to pay Paul."
EatenByLimestone said:The thing I have never heard anybody mention regarding these cars is what it does to your electric bill. Seriously, have you calculated how much it would cost to run a 1500 watt space heater all day long for a month? 1KWH costs me almost 20 cents after all the taxes and fees. What would it cost to charge a car up every night? It would be nice to charge it up at work, but how long do you think they would agree to that? Maybe a month or until the first electric bill comes in?
Matt
meathead said:You can buy a 3000 watt genset for $200.00?
Right - all you have left to do is rig an electronic ignition to your genset portable generator and then rig that ignition to a system that senses the charge of your battery bank and shuts the generator off when the bank is charged and turns it back on when the bank needs charging. Not sure what the cost for this system would be - maybe someone could do it with tinfoil and a hairclip but it would cost me and just about anyone else money and time.
meathead said:And all of that aside - I asked if you knew of a generator that would modestly power a house for 3 days on 5 gallons of fuel or less and doesn't cost a sum nearly equivilent to the prius. Only thing I know of that accomplishes this feat is solar panels - and they 'aint cheap. I didn't ask if you could find a cheaper way to gerry rig the same systym - which as of yet you haven't done.
jdemaris said:I have two automatic backup systems. None use any of the Rube Goldberg contraptions you mention. A good, automatic, low-end sytem - IF you wanted all factory made parts would require something like - #1 A load-sensing, automatic combo inverter/charger like a Trace DR2412. Four - eight 220 AH 6 volt deep cycle batteries, and a means to recharge them. It has an engine autostart feature for those that want it hooked to an electric-start generator. For that total system if you buy all new, it can run around $3000. If you make some of the stuff, and/or improvise, and/or buy used - it can be done cheaper.
jdemaris said:That question can't be answered as asked. That's why that article is silly. It does not give any useable figures - like how many actual watt-hours of power were made by the Prius on those few gallons of gas? It's easy to write BS articles like that. Leave just enough facts out so it can't be argued, yet - it seems to sound good.
meathead said:First off guy it fascinates me that you continue to insist on approaching this from a "why buy a prius to use as a generator when you could do it for cheaper" angle.
meathead said:What I was pointing out is that to do what the prius did your proposed system still needed to automatically start when its battery bank ran low and automatically shut off when its battery bank was charged. Otherwise you have a generator cranking away regardless of the state of charge of the battery bank and you are wasting fuel.
meathead said:I could be off here - I don't have as involved a system as you are using and I'm no expert as you pointed out - but doesn't your load-sensing, automatic combo inverter/charger just sense when the battery bank is full and stop charging, then sense when it is nearing empty and charge it up again? Does it actually send a signal to your generator and shut it off when it doesn't need to be running and then start it up again when the batteries need a charge?
meathead said:If you need to know the watt-hours produced by the prius in the article to think that's pretty cool then you're the one with the problem. If you want to argue it - argue it by doing some research on the prius battery bank and charging system and determine that it couldn't do what the article says it did.
Redox said:Apparently so and based on my personal experience with generators, this is believable. As noted, generators use a lot of fuel just to make 60 Hz thus making their part load efficiency rather poor. The new inverter generators from Honda get around this by using an inverter to generate 60 Hz with the engine running at a reduced speed. This saves a lot of fuel and makes them much quieter as well but at a price; they aren't cheap. Is it possible to make this whole thing more economical than the public utility? Probably not.
EatenByLimestone said:What is the auto start/voltage sensing feature called? I'd like to look into them further. Is it something that can be added to a generator/system?
Matt
tedt3124 said:P.S. Schneider Electric (Square D...etc) bought Xantrex last September.
Ted
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