Electric Vehicles Can Now Power Your Home for Three Days (msn.com) 163
There may soon come a time when your car "also serves as the hub of your personal power plant," writes the Washington Post's climate columnist. And then they tell the story of a New Mexico man named Nate Graham who connected a power strip and a $150 inverter to his Chevy Bolt EV during a power outage:
The Bolt's battery powered his refrigerator, lights and other crucial devices with ease. As the rest of his neighborhood outside Albuquerque languished in darkness, Graham's family life continued virtually unchanged. "It was a complete game changer making power outages a nonissue," says Graham, 35, a manager at a software company. "It lasted a day-and-a-half, but it could have gone much longer." Today, Graham primarily powers his home appliances with rooftop solar panels and, when the power goes out, his Chevy Bolt. He has cut his monthly energy bill from about $220 to $8 per month. "I'm not a rich person, but it was relatively easy," says Graham "You wind up in a magical position with no [natural] gas, no oil and no gasoline bill."
Graham is a preview of what some automakers are now promising anyone with an EV: An enormous home battery on wheels that can reverse the flow of electricity to power the entire home through the main electric panel. Beyond serving as an emissions-free backup generator, the EV has the potential of revolutionizing the car's role in American society, transforming it from an enabler of a carbon-intensive existence into a key step in the nation's transition into renewable energy.
Some crucial context from the article:
Graham is a preview of what some automakers are now promising anyone with an EV: An enormous home battery on wheels that can reverse the flow of electricity to power the entire home through the main electric panel. Beyond serving as an emissions-free backup generator, the EV has the potential of revolutionizing the car's role in American society, transforming it from an enabler of a carbon-intensive existence into a key step in the nation's transition into renewable energy.
Some crucial context from the article:
- Since 2000, the number of major outages in America's power grid "has risen from less than two dozen to more than 180 per year, based on federal data, the Wall Street Journal reports... Residential electricity prices, which have risen 21 percent since 2008, are predicted to keep climbing as utilities spend more than $1 trillion upgrading infrastructure, erecting transmission lines for renewable energy and protecting against extreme weather."
- About 8% of U.S. homeowners have installed solar panels, and "an increasing number are adding home batteries from companies such as LG, Tesla and Panasonic... capable of storing energy and discharging electricity."
- Ford's "Lightning" electrified F-150 "doubles as a generator... Instead of plugging appliances into the truck, the truck plugs into the house, replacing the grid."
- "The idea is companies like Sunrun, along with utilities, will recruit vehicles like the F-150 Lightning to form virtual power plants. These networks of thousands or millions of devices can supply electricity during critical times."
Vehicle to load (Score:2)
Some modern EVs have a thing called V2L - vehicle to load - where you plug an adapter into the CCS port and can run power back out of the car to power an appliance. But realistically you're probably only going to be running an appliance or two from it. I don't believe any vehicle would cope with the massive power draw from a normal house although if someone was just running an offgrid / micro house maybe it would work.
Re: Vehicle to load (Score:4, Informative)
Thing is most people in an emergency only need a couple appliances. The refrigerator to keep your food from spoiling, your modem/router if the internet is still working, some phone chargers, maybe a lamp or two. I have operated for days with 10 gallons of gas and a Honda eu2000i which is basically like having one outlet available. Were we a bit uncomfortable due to no AC in the summer? Sure, but we able to cook, boil some water charge our phones and even watch some TV.
Wanting to run your house like it's on the grid during an emergency is a real luxury and a significant investment. Take your HVAC out of the equation and the power draw for most homes (who don't need electric heat) is actually not that much. What are the big draw items otherwise one needs in an emergency?
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The worst part of a power outage in Florida is not having air conditioning. A trick most of us who have lived here long enough know is that your typical 3 to 7 kW portable generator will start and run a 5,000 or 6,000 BTU window air conditioner just fine, and that's typically enough cooling capacity to make one of the bedrooms in an average 3/2 home, somewhat comfortable.
It's also why when people start getting serious about an approaching hurricane, the hardware stores typically sell out of those sorts of
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It's right there in the summary The Bolt's battery powered his refrigerator, lights and other crucial devices with ease.
Now I agree the rest of it makes it seem like he was living with no changes to lifestyle so it does read a bit contradictory.
Re: Vehicle to load (Score:5, Interesting)
That wasn't said in the original article though. I know a car can do V2L to run a couple of appliances but saying you can run a house for 3 days from a car isn't realistic unless everything is off except the essentials.
My average daily electricity usage (without A/C) is about 20kWh. My car has a 75kWh battery. That's over 3 days running everything except A/C.
The limiting factor is likely to be the output power of the inverter, so it's not runtime dependent. Running a few appliances would mean a very long runtime.
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the thing is, if he runs the house on car battery for 3 days, what happens when he needs to go out for supplies or - heaven forbid needs to evacuate before the power grid is restored? drained battery in the car means he has to abandon everything and walk away, maybe bicycle if he's got one.
Assuming it's a fairly local outage rather than a regional outage, being able to leave the area and charge at a HVDC charger and come back could actually be useful — doubly so if you have two electric cars and can change out which one is powering the house with minimal interruption.
Is any of this a good idea in an emergency? Maybe. Is it worth building an inverter into your EVSE along with appropriate automatic switching so you don't electrocute the linemen working on repairing your grid or power up
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I bought a Black and Decker AC/Heater/Dehumidifier combo unit for about $400. Runs on electricity only and while I don't use it that often, it does a pretty darn good job. I could run that off a gas generator in the event of a power outage.
The main reason I bought it was my rental unit has an single ac unit in the livingroom and doesn't really do much of anything to help keep the bedroom cool or hot. With this unit, I'll be able to use it to keep the bedroom cool without worrying about the rest of the apart
Re:Vehicle to load (Score:4, Informative)
on't believe any vehicle would cope with the massive power draw from a normal house although if someone was just running an offgrid / micro house maybe it would work.
Depends on the size of the EV. Sure, a tiny one with only a few kw motor and a couple dozen miles of range might as well be a go-cart for power but rapid chargers for EVs can do 350kW meaning a typical new large American house with two 120V phases at 200A is only 24kw (kva). That means the EV is pulling more than 14.5 houses with every circuit possible maxed to main breaker capacity. EV motors are similar, with even more power like 500kw motors. So to an EV, a maxed out house supply is nothing. The limiting factors will be your inverter and your fuses.
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Re: Vehicle to load (Score:2)
Re: Vehicle to load (Score:2)
Here is a description for split-phase electrical power distribution https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
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> This is about the house side, how the grid supplies power is not relevant.
They are literally the same thing. Nothing magical happens between the pole and the house.
US houses have one 240V phase with a neutral. Essentially it's one transformer winding with a center tap that's tied to ground at the service entrance. The only practical difference between US 240V/1Ph and EU/UK 230V/1Ph is where the neutral is referenced to ground in the system: In the US you get both legs and an earth-referenced center tap
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Who cares how the power is transmitted in the grid.
the people in the industry that defines what 2-phase power is.
The only important aspect to this discussion is what is coming in from the lines in the street thus the power delivered to the house.
No, the only important aspect to the discussion is how the term is used in the industry. That's why we have the term split-phase for what we get to residential homes in the US. Again, you are trying to come in and redefine something that already has a definition.
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What is going on here is that one person is using a definition that a physicist would use, while the other is using a definition that an electrician would use.
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My god you are thick.
Right back at you. I did not make the posts you clearly think I made.
Try reading next time, instead of reacting impulsively.
Re: Vehicle to load (Score:2)
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Re: Vehicle to load (Score:2)
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Power draw is the limiting factor. E.g. if car says provides 2500W output then add up what would exceed that and that's your limit. If someone is living in a micro house or off the grid house then maybe this is fine, but I don't see it working in the average household in an every day situation. Of course in an emergency situation people will only run the things they need to which might be fine too.
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says provides 2500W output
What cars are you referring to? 2500W is about 3hp and that’s barely enough to cruise at 30 mph/50 mph on a flat surface with no headwind. Real EVs can put out 100, 200, even 300 times or more power. Granted it’s not going to be all day, but you lack basic understanding of the orders of magnitude involved.
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EV batteries can put out far more DC power than a residential house would ever use, but, to use the power in a house, you need AC, which requires an inverter and the size of that inverter is going to be the limiting factor.
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EV batteries can put out far more DC power than a residential house would ever use, but, to use the power in a house, you need AC, which requires an inverter and the size of that inverter is going to be the limiting factor.
Maybe scroll up and read my first comment.
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on't believe any vehicle would cope with the massive power draw from a normal house although if someone was just running an offgrid / micro house maybe it would work.
Depends on the size of the EV. Sure, a tiny one with only a few kw motor and a couple dozen miles of range might as well be a go-cart for power but rapid chargers for EVs can do 350kW meaning a typical new large American house with two 120V phases at 200A is only 24kw (kva).
That's 200 amps per phase, times two phases. So it is 240V times 200A, or 48 KVA, plus 10% or so for inverter efficiency overhead, so more than 50 KVA. That's about a tenth the maximum current draw of Tesla's motors, but on the order of twice their average draw. Something to bear in mind.
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A 20kva backup generator is considered pretty big and more than adequate for most homes. Most homes here are 100 amp services only so only 24 kva max.
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Plenty of power (Score:2)
Just how much power do you think your house uses?
A quick search says US average household electricity use is creeping up towards 900kWh/month = 30kWh/day = 1.25kW average = 1.67horsepower average
Even a wimpy EV that can only deliver 40hp to the wheels should be able to deliver a full day's worth of home electricity in under an hour.
As an alternate reference - I've heard that a Tesla cruising down the highway at 60mph can draw as little as 15 kW of power. So two hours at that rate, 120 miles worth of range,
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Yeah I don't think people realize that once you deduct things that cool/heat the water and air you are left with the remaining like 10% of total household draw.
Water heaters, HVAC and clothes dryers are by far the largest consumers of energy in a home.
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I think your figures are off.
We use about 20kWh per day, when not using the A/C, and we have a natural gas-powered water heater, clothes dryer and stovetop. We do have an electric oven, but use that rarely.
We probably have more than the average number of computers running all the time.
Re: Plenty of power (Score:2)
No. You need to check out heat pump water heaters 70+% more efficient than electric resistance and using the electricity equivalent of a 100W light bulb. 10-year warranties are normal and an ROI of 3-4 years depending on your usage patterns. Hot water is not an issue.
Re: Plenty of power (Score:2)
I just replaced a 50-gallon (US) electric resistance unit that was installed back in 2011 with a new hybrid heat-pump model of the same capacity.
The Energyguide yellow sticker on the old unit listed an estimated yearly operating cost of $514, at 4825 kWh. The $514 in 2011 would be about $620 in today's dollars at today's electricity rate.
The sticker on the new unit lists $117 @ 837 kWh for annual usage. That's almost 6x less cost and about a $500 annual savings for me. The $1,600 unit price (including +5 ye
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Some modern EVs have a thing called V2L - vehicle to load - where you plug an adapter into the CCS port and can run power back out of the car to power an appliance. But realistically you're probably only going to be running an appliance or two from it. I don't believe any vehicle would cope with the massive power draw from a normal house although if someone was just running an offgrid / micro house maybe it would work.
The Ford lightning has a split phase ~10kw inverter.
Wasn't this Musk's pitch 10 years ago? (Score:4, Insightful)
Personally, I charge my car to 80% from the grid and I generally want that range to be there when I get into the car. If there is some emergency place for me to be I don't want to be forced to stop on the way at a charge station any more than I would at a gas station.
And that would be more probable in a general grid power failure situation. An elderly relative 80 miles away needs help and the regular caregiver is gone, for example. And the power station has brought down all the charge stations and the ones that are open are overflowing. I just don't want to be in that. And, BTW, driving away with the house's power supply leaves everything in the freezer to melt anyway.
So the car battery as my energy supply just doesn't really do it for me. That's what a power-wall or two is good for. More expense, but lots of greedy capitalists are willing to lend you money to do it.
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Powerwalls are for storing energy from a PV system for use at night, and/or taking advantage of lower overnight rates from some utility companies (though I really have to question if the latter would achieve ROI). While Tesla does promote grid power loss backup as a feature, it's still significantly cheaper to go with a fossil fuel-powered generator if having backup power is your only goal.
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Nissan was actually doing it 10 years ago. They offered it in Japan.
Re: Wasn't this Musk's pitch 10 years ago? (Score:2)
It is pointless for your daily energy consumption. But it is very useful that one day of the year when an ice storm takes out the grid and you are stuck sheltering in the home for 24h waiting for power and everything to get back to normal as well. Here is Texas outages usually come together with stay-at-home directives for many workers, anyway. So it does not apply to everyone, but it could help lots of people those rare cases. And that in turn hello first responders.
As I was reading this (Score:2)
Someone knocked on my door just now wearing some solar company logo shirt. I opened the door, said "If you are selling solar stuff, get the fuck out of here", and shut the door. A few months ago after having a crew crawling over a neighbor's roof, Sunrun rang my doorbell. I opened the door, said "You are selling finance contracts, not solar equipment. Leave immediately."
One of these outfits had set up a small sales office in local retail space. I overheard these jokers talking: it was like Glengarry G
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All so totally true. Always the pitch "you don't have to spend a dime and you will start saving right away!" I am so sick of them pitching it.
There was one deal where they offer a monthly rental. You don't get title to the equipment but they put it on your roof for "free" and take some monthly fee which they promise will be less than the money you save on your utility bill. Nope.
If you work out the math it almost makes sense. There is nothing wrong with a capital investment to save recurring costs
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Wow, wait until you hear how the oil industry operates!
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Wow, wait until you hear how the oil industry operates!
My dad's jobs included under-aged powder monkey on an East Texas seismo crew.
At an impressionable age, I lived in a part of coastal Southern California served by a small newspaper that carried many foreclosure and estate sale notices. In addition to pay by the word metes and bounds descriptions referring to numerous obscure landmarks and monuments, most of the properties had mineral rights reservations that, to my reading, gave the immortal corporate zombie of some There Will be Blood oil company, the rig
Re: As I was reading this (Score:2)
Also, "power outage"? What 3rd world country is that?
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I don't regret buying solar for my condo 14 months ago. I regret that a divorce forced the sell of the home, but the solar WAS a good idea. Of course I bought the solar, not leased it. I was on track to pay the system off in about 4.5 years and after the first year, got a really nice true up credit of about $321~. Now that I'm renting and don't have solar, ouch WTF is wrong with California energy prices. At .45c a KwH now and am doing everything I can to not use power. Sure, my bill isn't what the loan was,
Reliability (Score:2)
Wait until he hears... (Score:2)
...that this is possible *today*, with ICE vehicles!
Just siphon the gas out of the gas tank and put it into a generator!
The problem isn't the tech, it's the practical issues that have already been pointed out in the thread: not a whole lot of people are looking to trade away their mobility in the sort of scenario where, by definition, it's unclear where the next charge is coming from, or from where. If a power outage takes longer to restore than the charge in the car (remember, three days is 'optimal condit
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And when the battery charge starts to get low just drive to a Supercharger.
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I don't know where you live, but I've spent much of my life living in apartments in Los Angeles, and every single one came with a parking space. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if that's the law there, and if it isn't for you, it should be. Of course, families with more than one car have to put the extras on the street, but that's their problem for wanting/needing extra cars.
Not a good idea (Score:2)
If you have an extended power outage, you may need to leave home to get supplies, or in some cases (such as the winter), evacuate. If you have a fully charged EV, you can use the vehicle for those things, or even as an emergency shelter if you need to warm up, something that it can actually do better than a gasoline car (no carbon monoxide risk). But if you drain the battery keeping your home powered, then the vehicle is useless when you actually need it.
If you want a backup solution, reserve the car batter
It Talks About Power Outages - Charging EVs????? (Score:2)
All the EV nuts vote this obvious down, but without an adequate electric grid, even America can't charge all the car batteries EV proponents want on the road. And they don't see the irony of this story about a guy running his home from a car because the power grid failed again. Not everyone has a house (at least half the population doesn't own). And less can afford to install solar pa
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how to get solar w/o tax deductions (Score:2)
My big issue is I don't pay income tax (insufficient income) so no deduction for solar or home energy upgrades. All the solar installers rely on you getting that discount -- and w/o it, you are looking at a small mortgage paying $400-500 back to installers -- more than electric bill. How can low-income people not be subsidizing electric company by paying higher rates for those that can afford solar w/government subsidizing?
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Hate the terminology (Score:2)
I've done this in the past (Score:2)
I used a 2kW inverter on my EV for long (day+) outages.
Being able to run the fridge, chest freezer, and multiple lights is more than enough. I powered the Internet devices, but unfortunately there was no signal on the other end.
A modern vehicle with 80kWh storage, and a larger back feed, could run the entire house, minus central A/C, electric oven, or dryer. The only problem is, EV batteries are not designed to be "deep cycle", nor the chassis should carry a constant load. So, good in a rare emergency, but
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The outages are very rare, happening every few years, so it does not warrant to keep a generator in storage all the time.
As the other commenter said, compared to a simple inverter they also happen to be high maintenance.
Ideally, (20+ years timeframe), EVs parked at homes can be used as a "micro grid" for neighborhoods, sharing the power (at a price of course). That requires significant preparation, especially for safety, but can be achieved.
Devil's advocate here - end up with dead EV if.... (Score:3)
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Don't these people need a car? (Score:2)
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Can? (Score:2)
Ok, come on by. Maybe they mean "could." Could, if, and if, and if $$$$, and if 2035.
Re:Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:5, Interesting)
If he had solar panels, why did he need the EV? Any solar system that is dependent on the grid isn't useful IMHO.
The EV works better at night. :-)
It's basically the energy storage device for the solar panels, but he only uses it during a power outage. With enough solar capacity to power the house *and* charge the EV, I imagine he could use the panels during the day and EV at night to power the home -- depending on the daytime EV driving usage, away from home time, etc...
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:3)
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The car is limited by its DC to AC inverter.
Perhaps EVs can simply have DC out and users provide their own inverters, matched/sized to their needs?
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:4, Informative)
Lucid Air can do this right now.
19.2kw car to home if the charge box is wired to a 100a breaker (also requires a transfer switch to make it legal IIRC).
https://www.lucidinsider.com/2... [lucidinsider.com]
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Actually no solar system without a battery can work independent of the grid. Solar would brownout your devices and under volt them during moments of passing clouds or exceeding the supply with added demand (like starting a motor).
There are a few inverters able to provide AC power from PV input only. While reliability is off the table there is no under volt. When PV energy is insufficient the inverter simply shuts down.
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:2)
Re:Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:5, Informative)
Approximately 80% of the power made by a solar system is between 10am and 2pm. That means that you need to store that energy to be used for the rest of the day and night. Unfortunately, batteries are expensive--for instance, my solar system installed was $20k after rebates, but the batteries alone would have been $30k and taken years to arrive (backordered). There are only a few companies selling batteries. Batteries are crazy expensive right now--it's actually cheaper to buy an EV than it is to buy stationary batteries. For instance, you can get a 40 kWh battery in a Nissan Leaf for $25k (with a car attached!), but a Powerwall is $10k ($17k installed) for 13 kWh. It's much cheaper for him to just run an inverter off his 12V system in the EV than it is to fully wire up the house.
So, for all these reasons, people who just want to save money opt for "grid tie" systems, where they only function when the grid is up. Those systems won't produce any power if the grid is down, and thus, don't help you during an outage, but they do save a lot of money (and carbon emissions). My break-even point on my solar system is around 8 years, and I won't have a bill after. I'd say that's useful!
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Solar panels basically always produce more or less power than needed. Without something to pull shortages or dump excess to, you would have unacceptable voltage spikes and brownouts.
Huh? Come again? Are you telling me that for a solar panel installation to work properly there must be a constant load? Where are you getting this from?
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Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:2)
In practice, when a solar system without a battery is installed, power is routed from the panels to the grid. There it gets âoestabilizedâ by being blended with other power with the right frequency (60hz). Then you get your power from the grid, from that pool of mixed power, yours and others.
So if the grid is gone, your panels are configured to shut down, because there is no place to push excess power (when panels are overproducing) or pull extra power (when you home wants more than panels produce
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because there is no place to push excess power (when panels are overproducing)
You consume too much nuclear power propaganda. Excess solar power is not a problem (for solar power plants) at all. You can just not use it. It doesn't damage anything. That is unlike excess power in conventional or nuclear power plants, which need to be actively controlled because spinning generators are typically coupled directly to the grid and can cause destructive currents to flow if they become unsynchronized. You can't dump excess primary power in a hurry either, so these types of power plants need a
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Let me break it to you in another way. Let's say you have a cabin in the woods wi
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Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:2)
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The device which turns the DC from the panels into AC for your appliances will usually stop doing that in a power outage for safety reasons, but there's no technical reason it can't keep working through a power outage. You just need an off-grid capable version and be disconnected from the grid. Aga
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:2)
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Any solar system that doesn't have battery storage is dependent on the grid. But it is how he "cut his monthly energy bill from about $220 to $8 per month".
Is it mentioned anywhere if he's gotten past the ROI for the purchase/installation of solar panels yet?
They're not free and that effects the overall spending...
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:4, Insightful)
Who cares about getting back the ROI to justify getting solar! He has power when others donâ(TM)t. Whatâ(TM)s that worth?
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:5, Interesting)
I have power when others don't, and I don't have solar panels either. It cost me $150 for the used generator. I spent a few extra dollars on a transfer switch and power inlet so the generator could power the house, the decision to make that modification was aided by storm damage to my house. I don't need to plug the house into the generator to run lights and refrigerator but it means less work in running extension cords.
How much do those solar panels cost? Again, my generator was worth $150. When new my generator was likely worth twice what I paid, newer ones cost more because now they must have CO detectors.
Sure, I'll need access to gasoline for running the generator but that's a relative non-issue since I need to keep gasoline around for running my lawnmower, snowblower, and as a reserve for my truck in case of something going wrong at the local filling station. Last time I had seen an power outage lasting more than a two hours the entire city had power problems, including the local filling station. A wind storm tore down power poles and took the roof off all kinds of buildings, including the local filling station. What is that going to do to rooftop solar?
What is a consideration for me is what is the most likely cause of a power outage. In my area that's going to be (in no particular order) ice storms, hail storms, snow storms, wind storms, lightning storms, and flooding in the lower areas between myself and the power plant. Most of those are likely to damage rooftop solar. A gasoline generator in my garage is almost certainly to survive. If that generator sees damage then I likely have larger problems than being without electricity.
I can see value in rooftop solar but everyone I know with rooftop solar also has a backup generator. That's because around here rooftop solar is a tax deduction, and a generator is how to keep the lights on after a storm.
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:4, Informative)
Who cares about getting back the ROI to justify getting solar! He has power when others donÃ(TM)t. WhatÃ(TM)s that worth?
After 5 years, my solar system has paid for itself: that's a pretty good ROI (*)
However, it does not provide backup power. If the grid turns off, the solar system also turns off. A battery is required to have a solar system that will continue running when the grid is off.
* California has changed the NEM rules drastically. I don't think any new solar system will ever pay for itself without a battery. Fortunately for me, my house was grandfathered in to the old rules for 20 years.
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Who cares about getting back the ROI to justify getting solar!
It's not about justification, just correctly calculating his current electricity costs. He mentions his electric bill going from $220 to $8 per month but it's higher when including the costs of the solar panels and installation.
Re: Has solar panels, but he needs the EV? (Score:2)
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... but you won't be going anywhere!
I was thinking that too. Depending on *why* the power is out, you may need to get out of town at some point in that EV ...
His income is irrelevant (Score:2)
It certainly makes sense to utilize your BEV as a source of backup power when doing so won't potentially leave you with a dead vehicle and no way to charge it. The guy in TFS has a PV system, which is great if your housing and budget situations allow it. Most of us though, have to just cross our fingers and hope the grid comes back online.
What does that have to do with anything? They're reporting on the fact that modern cars are designed to be a backup power system. This is novel and news to most of us. Just because it doesn't work for you doesn't mean it's not worth reporting. Also, just because you can't afford it today doesn't mean it won't become more affordable or practical in the near future. iPhones seemed impractical to me and many others based on cost when they came out. Soon data plans went down in price and now everyone has
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I live in Florida which frequently has hurricanes.
Well, there's your problem. Florida is basically just one big flood insurance scam disguised as a diseased penis.