Calzone
Gear Whore #1
Borge,
I believe it is in one of the Nordic countries they have free EV hookups, and the benefit for their national grid is that somehow each car's battery is used as a battery backup as a huge bank of batteries.
Mighty clever.
I wonder if this could be scaled down to an individual home. Not so sure of how many amp-hours can be stored in a vehicle's battery, and also how big are the losses from voltage inversion.
I know in Westchester County where Peekskill is on the northern end that many homeowners buy generators.
I'm trying to be forward thinking. Going with a solar array and owning an EV certainly is in the future, but how cost feasible is it. Even if just for a backup it would be an asset.
BTW the stuff I learned in trade school was mostly analog. Computers were kinda new back in the late 70's. A Com-E-Door 64 was a consummer computer and people were learning "Basic."
I am obsolete for sure. Call me old school. I won't take it as an insult. LOL.
Cal
I believe it is in one of the Nordic countries they have free EV hookups, and the benefit for their national grid is that somehow each car's battery is used as a battery backup as a huge bank of batteries.
Mighty clever.
I wonder if this could be scaled down to an individual home. Not so sure of how many amp-hours can be stored in a vehicle's battery, and also how big are the losses from voltage inversion.
I know in Westchester County where Peekskill is on the northern end that many homeowners buy generators.
I'm trying to be forward thinking. Going with a solar array and owning an EV certainly is in the future, but how cost feasible is it. Even if just for a backup it would be an asset.
BTW the stuff I learned in trade school was mostly analog. Computers were kinda new back in the late 70's. A Com-E-Door 64 was a consummer computer and people were learning "Basic."
I am obsolete for sure. Call me old school. I won't take it as an insult. LOL.
Cal