Garpal Gumnut
Ross Island Hotel
- Joined
- 2 January 2006
- Posts
- 15,007
- Reactions
- 13,336
I WAS THE PERSON WHO HAD THE VISION AND FORESIGHT, NOT YOU!
I am the person who has the exceptional and extraordinary abilities in strategy and risk management, not you.
my solution is the best way to go about it.
So stop being a pest and go do something constructive with your time, rather than attempting to claim ideas and solutions that are quite frankly beyond your intellectual capacity.
Ok.
I call.
Show us your cards.
gg
Yes the SMR's will be available a lot sooner than fusion and as you say will suit Australia's relatively small load grid.The problem is wi5 fusion it’s too far away, there too big and way too expensive. All these factors are not the answer. Modular reactors are cheep, small, are multipurpose and can be retro fitted into a existing infrastructure such as decommissioned coal for power stations.
Actually the slur was against me and you're defending a person that is claiming what is not theirs to claim.These are extraordinary claims about yourself and a slur on a fellow ASF Member.
Please provide your full CV with references to validate your statements about your history and ability.
gg
These are extraordinary claims about yourself and a slur on a fellow ASF Member.
Please provide your full CV with references to validate your statements about your history and ability.
gg
These are extraordinary claims about yourself and a slur on a fellow ASF Member.
Please provide your full CV with references to validate your statements about your history and ability.
gg
Yes the SMR's will be available a lot sooner than fusion and as you say will suit Australia's relatively small load grid.
Whether they will be required, is yet to be seen and that will depend a lot on the storage capacity available for renewables and the amount committed to IMO.
Renewable generation isn't an issue, it is cheap to install and run, installing storage doesn't have the same commercial return so nowhere near as attractive. The unfortunate part is twice as much storage is required, than generation.
Yes it is a huge subject and covers many aspects, we have a good thread on electric cars and another on the future of power generation and storage, there are some very knowledgeable posters who contribute.Your right storage is the problem. Unfortunately batteries are not the answer in my view.
The answer is liquid storage not batteries. Carbon Engineering has already shown you can create carbon capture fuels using renewable energy and getting efficient results.
An energy in a liquid form can be transferred, stored and used way more efficient then batteries.
Look at formula E, there answer for a refuel is jumping into a new car lol. That is not the answer.
I believe they even charge there cars up at the track using synthetic fuels in there generators.
Theta could have been derived from your first drawing.You will also need these given inputs to solve the problem: D1 is 2.677m and angle at B is 26.57 Degrees:
View attachment 106947
I will give yourself and Basilio 3 hours from now to respond, at which point this contract will expire.
I will post the correct answer with my workings later tonight Sydney time.
If you fail to respond correctly with your workings; then I will consider accepting your apology, as yours and Basilio's challenge is unsuccessful.
Any type that start with "nu" and end "clear."When you say nuclear what kind of nuclear are you suggesting ?
The thing is for humans to survive on earth, we can't just keep using up natural resources at a faster and faster rate eventually you run out even if you recycle you never get 100% recovery.Another question I have is,
Being that Australia basically has an abundant supply of natural gas, dose anyone Evan see a future for nuclear energy in Australia?
Can nuclear energy and natural gas coexist, or will they be a competitive market?
I’m in no way to put my hands up for a gen4 reactor installed in my neighbourhood anytime soon lol, but places like Adelaide where water levels get extremely low, and power supplies are at critical levels. Having nuclear thermal desalination would be game changing.
Farm produce would be cheeper. We can fertilise the land much faster and in wider areas then before. Australia farms be much greener. These are the things renewables can not deliver.
Theta could have been derived from your first drawing.
A better test would have been to calculate the diameter of a hailstone in millimetres that could shatter a standard PV panel.
On topic, given that solar/wind+storage is significantly cheaper than nuclear, what would cause Australia to adopt it? That bastion of the free world, the USA, cannot find a commercial case for it.
@Chronos-Plutus
You are an @rsehole and on permanent ignore.
Next time we meet I'll stick that triangle up you where the sun don't shine and I'll put my request again and I dare say I'll get my answer.
You are all hat and no herd.
gg
You choose.What fuel are you suggesting? What reactor design?
What vessel?
With metrics.Oh where would I start lol
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