A landlord/commercial building owner will be able to lease a new LENR system for less monthly cost than he is currently paying for heating fuel and electric. No brainer.
On Monday, February 20, 2012, Axil Axil wrote: > http://nextbigfuture.com/2011/03/supercritical-carbon-dioxide-brayton.html > > > > Take a look at the size comparison of CO2 unit verses steam. The steam > turbine is a quarter page and the CO2 turbine is the size of an exclamation > point at twice the capacity. > > > > First the wires are all paid for and they all are in use. The key to LENR > success is to capture as much of the existing electric infrastructure as > possible. > > > > Most people in the US cannot now afford to buy housing. Landlords will opt > for pay as you go rent/utility payments. > > > > The upfront cost of a new DGT power system is not cost effective for the > landlord. So like green power, DGT power will not be successful. > > > > Don’t drink the Green power cool aid. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 4:56 PM, Robert Leguillon < > robert.leguil...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > I believe that it was Jed that first made the comparison: > > In the past ice (simple, frozen H2O) was delivered to businesses and > homes. Centralized production, then distribution made sense due to the > technological limitations of the time. Now that nearly every home in the > developed world has its own freezer, these distribution channels are pared > down to gas-station and supermarket deliveries, for barbecue and picnic > support. > > *If Ni-H becomes sufficiently compact and reliable*, we would simply > replace a furnace or air conditioner with an all-in-one Combined Heat and > Power device. This won't occur overnight, but seems to be a logical result > of power system evolution. > > > > ------------------------------ > Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2012 16:36:15 -0500 > > Subject: Re: [Vo]:The first real NiH reactor > From: janap...@gmail.com > To: vortex-l@eskimo.com > > > The economy of scale says that one room sized CO2 supercritical electric > turbine is far more economical then 10 million sterling electric power > generators. > > > > If you are a standalone survivalist, have the capital and the square > footage to install your own power system, then DGT may be the product for > you. > > > > But in a high density urban environment, few will be able to fit their > stuff into their apartment or their condo let alone afford their own > electric utility package. > > > > The ideal of self-sufficiency will not prevail against the reality of > crowded urban living. > > > On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 4:14 PM, Chemical Engineer <cheme...@gmail.com>wrote: > > The grid of the future is no grid (existing grid will transistion to a > hot backup for some time) > > Distributed power systems will prevail long term since fuel and electrical > distribution/transmission costs & upkeep go towards zero $ and a > distributed system is much safer during war , solar flares, etc. > Distributed LENR systems will provide local CHP which is a big > plus.Equipment will be taxed, capitalized & depriciated. > > On Sunday, February 19, 2012, Jay Caplan wrote: > > ** > I agree, the market will decide the optimum scale and location for these > types of generating facilities for the best economy. > >