Quote Originally Posted by MarkCO View Post
You are too kind Grant.

Even working tangentially and directly in the automotive and alternative fuels industries, I have lost most of the bets I have made. In 2015, I had to pay off a 20 year bet to a buddy that by 2015, half of the cars on the road in the US would be diesel/electric hybrids. We only have a small percentage of hybrids and a miniscule number of D/E hybrids even though, for at least the last 10 years, it has been the most economic system to deliver the US Consumer what we demand of transportation at a reasonable cost. In 1988, I drove a Concorde with a gas turbine engine that was getting into the 50 mpg combo range and did a standing 1/4 mile in 11 seconds. Open combustion was deemed "undesirable" but man did I want that car.
LOL. I try.

The solar roads thing is just bad implementation of solar technology, period...

The single easiest thing to pick on, that most don't think about, is that roads are always dirty. The efficiency loss that occurs from dirty PV panels is noticeable, and then you consider that not only will it be dirty, but it's also covered by "hard-shade" for a significant portion of the day (you know, cars and trucks), and now all you are left with is a REALLY expensive, horribly inefficient, solar solution that makes roads unnecessarily more difficult/expensive to build and maintain...