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  1. #41
    Self Conscious About His "LOAD" 00tec's Avatar
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    Ooh, cadmium isn't toxic at all

  2. #42
    High Power Shooter FromMyColdDeadHand's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BushMasterBoy View Post
    I figure the whole car thing will be solar powered. EV's will be mainstream. Going to Walmart will be the electric car. Going to granmas in Florida take the gas car or diesel. 20% of my neighborhood has huge solar arrays in their back yard.
    If I could take a high speed electric train to DIA, I would use it. Not having a solar powered high speed train along the Front Range is silly. Even the rail could be made here using solar powered steel mills...all the groundwork resources are already here locally.


    https://www.cpr.org/2022/02/02/puebl...el-mill-evraz/

    https://www.ttci.tech/
    Quote Originally Posted by Gman View Post
    Going all electric for new cars by 2035 is a pipe dream.

    If they don't keep bumping the dates out as they approach, we'll start to look like Cuba, with a lot of really old cars on the road.
    Quote Originally Posted by BushMasterBoy View Post
    Supposedly cadmium-tellurium photovoltaic cells are more efficient than just plain silicon cells. Probably similar to comparing the old Pentium processors to todays modern laptops. I could still see my self driving an EV and charging it by a large array in the back yard. Still out of my price range currently.

    https://www.investopedia.com/first-s...actory-6541142

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Solar
    Cadmium….
    I'll stop buying black rifles when my wife stops buying black shoes.

  3. #43
    Industry Partner BPTactical's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by hollohas View Post
    Only if you opt in to save $40/year.

    Here's just one of many posts floating around...




    Make your deal with the Devil, the Devil will get his due.


    https://www.thedenverchannel.com/new...ergy-emergency
    DENVER ? During the dog days of summer, it's important to keep your home cool. But when thousands of Xcel customers in Colorado tried adjusting their thermostats Tuesday, they learned they had no control over the temperatures in their own homes.
    Temperatures climbed into the 90s Tuesday, which is why Tony Talarico tried to crank up the air conditioning in his partner's Arvada home.
    "I mean, it was 90 out, and it was right during the peak period," Talarico said. "It was hot."
    That's when he saw a message on the thermostat stating the temperature was locked due to an "energy emergency."
    "Normally, when we see a message like that, we're able to override it," Talarico said. "In this case, we weren't. So, our thermostat was locked in at 78 or 79."
    On social media, dozens of Xcel customers complained of similar experiences ? some reporting home temperatures as high as 88 degrees.
    Xcel confirmed to Contact Denver7 that 22,000 customers who had signed up for the Colorado AC Rewards program were locked out of their smart thermostats for hours on Tuesday.
    "It's a voluntary program. Let's remember that this is something that customers choose to be a part of based on the incentives," said Emmett Romine, vice president of customer solutions and innovation at Xcel.
    Customers receive a $100 credit for enrolling in the program and $25 annually, but Romine said customers also agree to give up some control to save energy and money and make the system more reliable.
    "So, it helps everybody for people to participate in these programs. It is a bit uncomfortable for a short period of time, but it's very, very helpful," said Romine.
    This is the first time in the program's six year span that customers could not override their smart thermostats, Romine said. He said the "energy emergency" was due to an unexpected outage in Pueblo combined with hot weather and heavy air conditioner usage.
    But Talarico said he had no idea that he could be locked out of the thermostat. While he has solar panels and a smart thermostat to save energy, he says he did not sign up to have this much control taken away.
    "To me, an emergency means there is, you know, life, limb, or, you know, some other danger out there ? some, you know, massive wildfires," Talarico said. "Even if it's a once-in-a-blue-moon situation, it just doesn't sit right with us to not be able to control our own thermostat in our house."



    Sorry, my FuckOMatic machine is fresh out of fucks to give to you.....
    Last edited by BPTactical; 09-01-2022 at 10:00.
    The most important thing to be learned from those who demand "Equality For All" is that all are not equal...

    Gun Control - seeking a Hardware solution for a Software problem...

  4. #44
    Zombie Slayer kidicarus13's Avatar
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    Reminds me of the people that signed their student loan paperwork when they needed $ for college but after graduation, had a change of heart regarding the conditions of the loan agreement.
    Last edited by kidicarus13; 09-01-2022 at 11:06.
    Lessons cost money. Good ones cost lots. -Tony Beets

  5. #45
    Zombie Slayer
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    Default Toxic Waste

    I thought the same thing about cadmium. Toxic AF. Colorado has a terrible industrial hygiene record. I could cite Cotter Uranium Mill, Rocky Flats Arsenal and Asarco Globeville plant, Denver as just a few examples.

    Long term, the widespread application of CdTe solar panels would require recycling of the panels after their useful lifespan. The .gov would probably put a recycling fee on them. Same as when you buy a car battery, you have to turn one in for recycling or pay a fee. Link below shows what happens when you just bury cadmium-tellurium in a landfill.

    The other scenario, eventually we run out of oil.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5607867/
    Per Ardua ad Astra

  6. #46
    a cool, fancy title hollohas's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BPTactical View Post
    Make your deal with the Devil, the Devil will get his due.


    https://www.thedenverchannel.com/new...ergy-emergency





    Sorry, my FuckOMatic machine is fresh out of fucks to give to you.....
    So dude is literally generating his own power with solar panels to feed into xcel's grid and they still took control of his shit to limit what he could use. "Thanks for the power, but you can't use it". That's cold. (or a guess hot in this case).

    If I ever install solar panels, I'd want a manual transfer switch to disconnect from grid power.

  7. #47
    High Power Shooter FromMyColdDeadHand's Avatar
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    How are the control signals sent??? Over the power lines, but most thermostats are low voltage- wouldn’t that mess with IP over power?
    I'll stop buying black rifles when my wife stops buying black shoes.

  8. #48
    Self Conscious About His "LOAD" 00tec's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FromMyColdDeadHand View Post
    How are the control signals sent??? Over the power lines, but most thermostats are low voltage- wouldn’t that mess with IP over power?
    Not exactly sure, but you likely have to link your online thermostat account to the provider to get your tiny discount.

  9. #49
    Self Conscious About His "LOAD" 00tec's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BushMasterBoy View Post
    I thought the same thing about cadmium. Toxic AF. Colorado has a terrible industrial hygiene record. I could cite Cotter Uranium Mill, Rocky Flats Arsenal and Asarco Globeville plant, Denver as just a few examples.

    Long term, the widespread application of CdTe solar panels would require recycling of the panels after their useful lifespan. The .gov would probably put a recycling fee on them. Same as when you buy a car battery, you have to turn one in for recycling or pay a fee. Link below shows what happens when you just bury cadmium-tellurium in a landfill.

    The other scenario, eventually we run out of oil.

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5607867/
    You can't recycle shit in Colorado without paying a fee.

  10. #50
    Zombie Slayer
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    Default How They Do It and What I learned in Electronic Warfare School

    It is called the Skin Effect. Radio frequency signals will travel over the skin of a conductor. Even powerlines. Since the power is only 60 cycles it travels along the core of the conductor. So they send a radio signal over the powerlines and can read your meter etc. Or even shut off the power.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skin_effect
    Per Ardua ad Astra

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