by NDrLoR ➕follow (3) 💰tip ignore
« First « Previous Comments 11 - 50 of 83 Next » Last » Search these comments
For reference, I paid $3.319 at that location on May 15, 2006; $0.30 less. Fifteen years ago. But the People's Republic of California gasoline tax was lower in 2006 than it is now.
Because fracking was in its infancy then, duh.
I don't advocate Marxism, but he's been proven right on that point.
I wish you could easily fill up a car with natural gas, I would convert my car to run on it.
Teslas run on natural gas too, but the process is complicated with electricity generators, transformers, wires, batteries, etc.
I wish you could easily fill up a car with natural gas, I would convert my car to run on it.
I wish you could easily fill up a car with natural gas, I would convert my car to run on it.
Teslas run on natural gas too, but the process is complicated with electricity generators, transformers, wires, batteries, etc.
clambo saysI wish you could easily fill up a car with natural gas, I would convert my car to run on it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lO055g6JqLs
I wish you could easily fill up a car with natural gas, I would convert my car to run on it.If you have natural gas running to your house, you can get Honda's "Phil" device, which lets you (slowly) fill your tank in your garage. Expensive to instal, though. Personally, the most important part of filling at home is that you can plug in at night and unplug int he morning; as a second car, it's perfectly fine if it takes 10 hours to fill. That's the same filling time as a level-two electric charger, but the theoretical advantage of natural gas cars (assuming a network of filling stations), is that it can be filled at a dedicated station in only a few minutes.
I have been scuba diving with tanks pumped up to 3000psi for decades, they get hydro tested every 5 years and last a very long time, 20 years is no problem at all. I wonder what the big deal was with the car tanks?
The van explosion looks scary; guys have also been killed by exploding tires on heavy equipment.
So a pipeline is hackable, but a voting machine wasn’t???
But they seem like a good deal for the right person.
The splashy Mirai could be powered for a year from hydrogen from a single cow's manure.
Cows produce a lot of methane. Hence why Greenies want to ban sale of beef.
Not sure how they can put manure into a tank. Methane gas maybe.
I'm not sure it's possible
I don't think so, you will need more energy than you will get out of harvested methane.
B.A.C.A.H. saysI don't advocate Marxism, but he's been proven right on that point.
Did he really make this argument?
I've driven electric for 8 years no
I drove behind a Mirai earlier this week. There was definitely a lot of splashing coming out of its tail pipe. All ICE vehicles make water as a byproduct but this thing had a steady stream.
I've driven electric for 8 years now, powered by sunshine.
the solar array on the roof of his house puts more into the electric grid than it takes out.
HeadSet saysthe solar array on the roof of his house puts more into the electric grid than it takes out.
What's the point? They are paying peanuts for that.
What's the point? They are paying peanuts for that.
Actually in Va, they are not paying at all. It is called "net zero" because the best you can do is have a $0 electric bill. Any excess power just turns the meter backwards and is thus credited to future electric use.
True, but the trade-off is he gets power at night and at times when he is running his AC and concurrently oven/dryer. The solar guy gets an uninterrupted power, while the power company keeps any excess electricity.
« First « Previous Comments 11 - 50 of 83 Next » Last » Search these comments
patrick.net
An Antidote to Corporate Media
1,194,445 comments by 13,889 users - mortarmaker online now