Author Topic: Moving On  (Read 816 times)

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thunderhead

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Moving On
« on: August 26, 2005, 08:41:03 AM »
I attempted a diary entry, but the glaring lack of a <PRE> tag made posting a table too frustrating, and I put it in my LiveJournal instead.
« Last Edit: August 26, 2005, 08:41:03 AM by (unknown) »

Phil Timmons

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Re: Moving On
« Reply #1 on: September 04, 2005, 10:24:41 PM »
That was interesting.  Thanks.


Nice to see thing well structured and analyzed.


Really liked this phrase:


"they've become steadily less practical and steadily more preachy"


I swear I know those people :) :)


From the table it looked like not a lot of sun :(


Guess I am addicted to sunshine -- and probably one day will have skin cancer to show for it. :)


Even though all Summer, I wind working nights because all this Texas sunshine makes things just too hot to play (work) in the day.  


I suppose the wind-to-resistive-heat makes good sense.  Seems that often the coldest days are the most windy and cloudy.  Might try that myself.  Never have made a lot of sense of the battery bank stuff.

« Last Edit: September 04, 2005, 10:24:41 PM by Phil Timmons »

thunderhead

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Re: Moving On
« Reply #2 on: October 06, 2005, 02:50:38 AM »
Sorry I didn't notice this - I was looking for comments on LiveJournal, but forgot that diary entries here attract comments.  My bad. :-(


Guess I am addicted to sunshine -- and probably one day will have skin cancer to show for it. :)  Even though all Summer, I wind working nights because all this Texas sunshine makes things just too hot to play (work) in the day.


My brother lives in Texas - near Houston.  The heat never struck me as fun, especially without air conditioning; and as for the hurricanes...


I suppose the wind-to-resistive-heat makes good sense.  Seems that often the coldest days are the most windy and cloudy.  Might try that myself.  Never have made a lot of sense of the battery bank stuff.


I think heat stores are a good way to store energy that is going to be used for heating: both the collectors and the stores tend to be cheaper than electricity.  Underfloor heating can make good use of water at 40C; and by using homebrew solar panels as a preheater and a much smaller evac tube panel as the last in the chain, it should be possible to get the heat store up to 90C - important from the point of view of things like Legionella.  Between 40oC and 90C water stores a lot of heat.

« Last Edit: October 06, 2005, 02:50:38 AM by thunderhead »