Solar freeways and roads... This will be the future. This is so freaking awesome!
Welcome To The Future
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Sounds great, but lets start by making a simple roof panel that's affordable for everyone.Comment
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It's unbelievable, I look forward to have this in our country :DSkype: live:balint.media.buyer
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This is something I do not understand - why it's so expensive. You are talking about panels on a roof; They can't be that expensive to build. Add in a few pipes, some batteries, and a system to control it... And it shouldn't cost all that much.
I looked into solar a few weeks ago by attending a seminar at our HOA clubhouse. There are tax breaks and incentives, and my county has an extra incentive too where most of it is paid for....Herschel Savage
Brooklyn, NYComment
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It's a great idea, but how would they get the funding to lay this stuff on every roadway? It would have to start small.http://affiliates.Flirt4Free.com
http://www.Flirt4Free.com
Jeff -at- Flirt4Free dot com
Skype: jeff.vsmediaComment
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Great stuff. What if someone hack settings for road.Femdom Destiny
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email: webmaster(at)femdomdestiny.comComment
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You're missing the point.. The big lobbyist don't hate solar because it's clean energy, they hate it because if you put it on your house they can't charge you a monthly fee.
If every house in the country had a thousand or two watts of solar sitting on their roofs suddenly the energy companies would be up shit creek.In November, you can vote for America's next president or its first dictator.Comment
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i was amazed at how many homes had solar cells for eastern europe.. was like going into a future advanced land..You're missing the point.. The big lobbyist don't hate solar because it's clean energy, they hate it because if you put it on your house they can't charge you a monthly fee.
If every house in the country had a thousand or two watts of solar sitting on their roofs suddenly the energy companies would be up shit creek.Comment
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Femdom Destiny
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ICQ: 463-630-426
email: webmaster(at)femdomdestiny.comComment
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Actually I was very surprised at how much solar there is in New Orleans. There obviously must be some sort of subsidy program going on there, because just driving around some of the neighborhoods it would often be 50% or more of the houses that I'd see solar on the roofs.
Meanwhile here in New Mexico a place you have to be a fool not to have solar, I see almost none. Honestly this amazes me more than anything. If you live in NM, AZ, NV or really anywhere in the south west you could easily run a house on solar and be grid free yet I see very little solar here.In November, you can vote for America's next president or its first dictator.Comment
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And you think that the oil companys would allow this ?
I mean solar roads that come with solar cars ?
The technology has been out there for years, theres reasons why it has not really gone public ...We are looking for CAM Sites where our Colombian Models can work.
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great idea i will let ya know when my backyard is setComment
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yeah because the big lobbyists are the ones with the technologies to make things efficient and affordable...You're missing the point.. The big lobbyist don't hate solar because it's clean energy, they hate it because if you put it on your house they can't charge you a monthly fee.
If every house in the country had a thousand or two watts of solar sitting on their roofs suddenly the energy companies would be up shit creek.webmaster at pimproll dot comComment
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Great idea, whether we ever get to see it in widespread practice is probably down to those who's pockets would be affected by it's implementation.Comment
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im in canada, and was floored by how many houses / businesses had them.Actually I was very surprised at how much solar there is in New Orleans. There obviously must be some sort of subsidy program going on there, because just driving around some of the neighborhoods it would often be 50% or more of the houses that I'd see solar on the roofs.
Meanwhile here in New Mexico a place you have to be a fool not to have solar, I see almost none. Honestly this amazes me more than anything. If you live in NM, AZ, NV or really anywhere in the south west you could easily run a house on solar and be grid free yet I see very little solar here.
they had whole.. 'contraptions'... that had full rotation on seaside shops/restaurants.. but looks like someone built it at home based off mats.. best we have in vancouver is random pedestrian crosswalks with attached solar panels, and the odd enthusiast.
Interesting to hear about NO.. guess utilized due to the disaster?
anyway, it is just my opinion on a 2 week trip.. but it was the one main thing i remember.
something should happen.. one of the first things i did when getting back was start looking into it lolLast edited by _Richard_; 05-23-2014, 12:40 PM.Comment
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Great idea! Would love to see it executed, but there are many companies out there that will lobby against this, as well it would take a LONG time to even make a dent in the roadways.Comment
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You are right yet again. Best to not even try, right man? Give up! Thats what they should do. The nerve of some people trying to make the world a better place.
Solar Panels on cars would not work very well because the panels need to take up alot of space to charge a car's batteries in a reasonable time. If roads were solar, the energy they capture could charge cars while they drive on it via Induction.
The technology has been around for a long time but its getting cheap enough to do more and more things with.

(From Scientific American)Comment
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The panels are in the $1/watt threshold now, so they are not very expensive to buy them outright.You are right yet again. Best to not even try, right man? Give up! Thats what they should do. The nerve of some people trying to make the world a better place.
Solar Panels on cars would not work very well because the panels need to take up alot of space to charge a car's batteries in a reasonable time. If roads were solar, the energy they capture could charge cars while they drive on it via Induction.
The technology has been around for a long time but its getting cheap enough to do more and more things with.

(From Scientific American)
As far as panels on cars.. it's just not gonna happen because the car body would have the panels at all different angles.
Now my Telsa idea was to use their battery/drive system and build a AWD van like the old school VW Westy's. You could fit probably 500w on the roof which wouldn't keep it charged as a closed loop system, but 500w is enough to charge the batteries back up a pretty good amount.
With something like that, you could drive the car to work doing a average commute and then leave the car parked in the sun charging. By the end of the day it would probably be fully charged again. Meaning it's not going to be enough solar to keep you driving forever, but it would add quite a bit of supplement charging for the average city dweller.
Something like that could very well work in the southern states of the US where there is a lot of sunny days. It would however have to be some sort of van or SUV to get enough flat roof space for the solar.Last edited by crockett; 05-23-2014, 01:18 PM.In November, you can vote for America's next president or its first dictator.Comment
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Solar is becoming more and common here in Northern California. Our HOA didn't allow it at first, but eventually they lost that battle. Our county also has a great subsidy program too, and combined with all of the other programs it costs very little up front to buy and install on your house, and you can fiance that if you wish.Actually I was very surprised at how much solar there is in New Orleans. There obviously must be some sort of subsidy program going on there, because just driving around some of the neighborhoods it would often be 50% or more of the houses that I'd see solar on the roofs.
Meanwhile here in New Mexico a place you have to be a fool not to have solar, I see almost none. Honestly this amazes me more than anything. If you live in NM, AZ, NV or really anywhere in the south west you could easily run a house on solar and be grid free yet I see very little solar here.Herschel Savage
Brooklyn, NYComment
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If the oil companies were smart... they would be investing in this right now and leading the charge.
When you say "our lifetimes" you really mean your lifetime, right?Herschel Savage
Brooklyn, NYComment
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Very interesting my first thought wasnt traction Im sure that would be fine...when its dry but wet...different story
My second thought is that something on a scale this massive is also massively expensive even if each of those heaxagons were only a dollar yer talking a massive amount of outlay for even a small parking lot.
and finally the idea that they can generate enough power on their own to melt the snow/ice that sits on top of them is nonsense so do they expect the excess power to be stored in batteries? youd have to because about 8 of every 24 hrs is total darkness.
Im not saying it isnt feasable but theres a lot of questions and the bottom line is the bottom line...is it economically viable.
I applaud the thinking for sureMike South
It's No wonder I took up drugs and alcohol, it's the only way I could dumb myself down enough to cope with the morons in this biz.Comment
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Too damn expensive for the old coot superiors .what they don't understand they wont go for.Comment
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The panels may be cheap but how expensive will it not be to make the high quality roads that the panels must be installed on. A heavy truck needs a very solid ground that dont flex at all or the panels will break.
Not sure how you have in USA but in Sweden they would not last one day, we dont have concrete roads here and we will never be able to afford that either.
Panels on the roofs should clearly be much cheaper than it is here in Sweden anyway.Last edited by datingfactory.xxx; 05-23-2014, 10:36 PM.Comment
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Seems great. Like many great things, they will never implement it at global scale.Comment
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That's the thing. Solar roads generate electricity, which can be sold. They essentially make money. A concrete road does not, unless you count taxes paid to use it or tolls for example.
They already received the OK to build real roads as a proof of concept test.
Lots of detail here: http://www.solarroadways.com/numbers.shtml
Better video here:
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this isn't a dig at *anyone*, but it's interesting to see the mindset of the majority is always why it won't work, why it can't be done, why it will fail, and so on. It fascinates me how thought #1 is 'great idea', and 10 seconds later the follow-up thought(s) is/are the negative way of looking at it, instead of the how it CAN be done.
Separates the high-achievers from the rest (including me, not saying I'm any different as my default setting
).
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Our city waits until 2am or 4am to send the sweeper down our street. Vibrates the foundation and wakes the entire frickin' neighbourhood. And since we live on a corner, we get the added bonus of listening to the backup beeper 4-5x for an hour or more.Comment


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