rr6013
Well-known member
- First Name
- Rex
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2020
- Messages
- 225
- Reaction score
- 177
- Location
- San Carlos Panama
- Website
- shorttakes.substack.com
- Vehicles
- 1997 Tahoe 2 door 4x4
- Occupation
- Retired software developer and heavy commercial design builder
- Thread starter
- #1
TEXAS…asserts $17k electricity bill is consumer’s stupidity, due and owing. In the internet swiped image (above) of Elon what could he be_pondering_.
Why? Whichever way Future plays out Elon positioned Tesla with a suite of technological advances to provide it “first mover” advantage. Electrical motors, battery, electron generation(solar), electron storage and energy distribution enable Tesla to stand at the forefront. What Elon must be pondering is some self-imposed limit.
The reality “Can GRID electric support BEV?” Texas brought front and center. My un-scientific back of envelope wild ass guess is that the USA grid network would need 2x capacity to support all proposed BEV production in the next five years. Charging could be quite expensive for *any* weakness in grid-tie charging. Texas revealed the cost of weakness - $17k. Texas.gov asserted a free market philosophy in support of weak utilities.
Right now I have a $100 hedge on a LiON future Cybertruck. This image pretty much reflects my own thoughts. I thought that Benjamin was going to cost me $70k USD. But TCO has reared its ugly mug. It is 100% consumer responsibility those who buy LiON and need electrons. You will pay market rate for your electrons, buyer be warned.
Suddenly, I feel a pivot impulse coarsing through my nervous system that makes me look just like Elon pondering first principles in this collage. What I ponder? Hydrogen.
Grid-electricity highway charging robbery needs an consumer option. Could you accept a plug-compatible electron connection for a bed mounted hydrogen fuel cell as the next “Jerry can”?