Michel Jullian
Sun, 18 May 2008 08:08:26 -0700
Hi Robin, Good point about the desirability of ubiquitous EV chargers in parking lots, they would make the limited range of existing batteries acceptable. Payment by a vehicle bound smart card as you suggest would make the scheme quite practical. How about making this wireless: induction chargers buried under the 'chargking' places, and a "get 1 kWh" (or whatever) button in the car, which you would just have to hit before going shopping. Delivery could also be automatic, depending on your car's automatic buying settings (allow or not, acceptable kWh price...) and on the battery level (e.g. auto-buy only if not enough juice left to get back home safely). Michel P.S. Since no-one seems to have bit yet... do tell us more about that 2k COP reactor design please! ----- Original Message ----- From: "Robin van Spaandonk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com> Sent: Saturday, May 17, 2008 12:17 AM Subject: Re: [Vo]:Britain reveals UFO documents In reply to OrionWorks's message of Fri, 16 May 2008 08:46:51 -0500: Hi, [snip] >hotcakes off of Wall-Mart's shelves? Will I someday have a magic >electric box the size of a cloths hamper lurking down in the corner of >my basement supplying my household with up to 25kw of continuous >electricity? I already have the design for the box, but no one seems to be interested in helping me construct a prototype. BTW, in it's current form, it wont be standing in your basement, though a replacement for your local electric sub-station is not out of the question. Maximum theoretical COP allowed by the process itself is 2356, though there will be losses incurred in a real device. No radioisotopes produced, and no neutrons. This is a clean reactor. Primary fuel is Deuterium. > Will gas soon once again sell for less than twenty five >cents a gallon? Let's hope not - we would never see the end of "noxious" city air. ;) I would prefer "bettery" powered vehicles recharged anywhere for next to nothing from a grid supplied by fusion power. I envisage "drive-in" style parking lots at supermarkets, where instead of a speaker hanging on a post, there is a cable the one plugs into ones vehicle while shopping, and one drops a coin in the slot to pay for the power. Should provide a nice extra source of income for the supermarkets, and hence they should spring up all over the place. Rapid charging via high voltage low current. Specially insulated connector normally has no power connected to it. This is only turned on once a proper connection with the vehicle has been established (built in (encrypted?) "fool-proof" signal switch), and the coin has been dropped in the slot. In fact if everyone has their own encrypted "code" (PKE - built into the vehicle), then no coin is needed, and one's account can be charged directly. This also prevents misuse. [snip] Regards, Robin van Spaandonk The shrub is a plant.