Sneak Peak Video of the 
New Solar Hydrogen Home DVD
Coming SOON!

Download Over 100Meg of
FREE Hydrogen Video
Ride in the Famous H2 Geo
Click Here

re: diesel gensets, light loads, glazing
24 feb 2005
ignoramus21810   wrote:

>anthony matonak  wrote:

>> ignoramus21810 wrote:
>> ...
>>> well, to put the engine under full load, i would turn on a 4.5 kw
>>> water heater, dropped into a bucket of water. i did that to test my
>>> generator and i can make it a little more robust for everyday use.
>>> 
>>> so, yes it would be easy to use, and yes, i expect my house to be a
>>> light load for most of the time.
>> ...
>> excuse me if this sounds like a wild, implausible idea, but
>> perhaps it would work better if you had a smaller generator
>> to handle the majority of the light loads most of the time?
>>
>> you would only need to fire up the big generator for the
>> occasional big loads. i know it would be additional expense
>> but it would also give you a better chance of still having
>> power even if one of the generators went down.
>
>first, it is expensive, second, i do not like the idea of maintaining
>two generators, and third, loads are intermittent. think about my
>refrigerators, range, etc, i cannot run out and switch from one genset
>to another every time someone wants to boil a teapot of water.

this points to a need for a small demand management system for off-grid homes
with limited instantaneous power capacity from generators and inverters. we
might turn the fridge off while the range runs, turn the range off for a few
seconds while the well pump runs, and so on, with insteon/x10 hardware and
a wireless controller to implement a priority scheme. if someone turns on
a teapot with the switch on the handle, the ac receptacle senses that and
signals the controller, which delays applying full teapot power until the
controller turns off something else in the house. small on-grid businesses
with demand meters could also use boxes like this. 

on a larger scale, a few years ago i met a negawatt trader who made money
in new york state on-line power auctions by meeting predicted utility grid
demands on peak summer days by turning off central ac systems in large
apartment buildings for an hour or so in the afternoon. he got paid the same
as an energy provider, and only bid when the instantaneous auction price
got up to about $1/kwh, but he got more valuable credits, since reducing
demand creates no pollution. the smallest practical load for him was
1 megawatt, and he seemed excited about the chance to control 1 kw loads
automatically.

nick




I got ALL of these 85 Solar Panels for FREE and so can you.  Its in our Ebook
Ready for DOWNLOAD NOW.

Site Meter