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Photo: Sandia and Stirling's solar setup

Back to: Sandia pushes limits of solar technology

The Sandia project will create a solar-dish farm that uses a so-called Stirling system, which generates electricity through a mechanical engine. Photo credit: Randy Montoya
The Sandia project will create a solar-dish farm that uses a so-called Stirling system, which generates electricity through a mechanical engine.

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NOT THAT EFFIECENT.
by November 25, 2004 9:40 AM PST
OUR SUNS REALLY ONLY HOTTEST ON EARTH WHEN DIRECTLY OVERHEAD. THAT LEAVES 22 HOURS DAILY WITH LITTLE OR NO SOLAR ENERGY. WIND POWER PROABLY MUCH BETTER SOLUTION AS WIND VIRTUALLY NEVER CEASES.SIGNED:PHYSICIAN THOMAS STEWART VON DRASHEK M.D.
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Inefficiency
by mpaint November 25, 2004 10:11 AM PST
Indeed in many areas Solar would not be as productive Wind.
However you must customize the solution to fit the environment.
In arid regions you would get a lot more power out of a solar system than a wind system due to long periods of intense heat and little wind.
In areas far from the equator that get little direct exposure to the sun, but due to geographical features endure nearly constant wind, then that energy source would be best.
Lets not forget hydro or tidal as well as alternatives to fossil fuels for energy production.
The world must wake up, peak oil has come and gone, the end of the petro age is very near.
We need to make this a greater priority than any war or technological advance we have ever dealt with as global strategy.
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in agreement
by rturner2 November 25, 2004 3:29 PM PST
I couldn't agree further!

Unfortunately the world is being run by vested interests rather then sane decision making. We must factor in the cost to the environment on existing ways of making electicity and of course "new ways" won't be as cheap in the beginning without mass production!
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solar electricity
by November 26, 2004 7:36 AM PST
Will the electric power companies let the price come down enough so that everyone can afford one of these units once they are engineered enough to have them sit on a corner of the house roof?
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Go Solar Stirling!
by February 19, 2005 3:56 PM PST
It seems to be the best all-around replacement for fossil fuels
that I've seen so far. The combination of solar concentrators and
stirling engine can be used to produce clean electricity. The uses
for that electrical power, and the advantages over fossil fuel
consumption, are many. Peak solar electrical production
coincides nicely with peak electrical demand. If fully utilized,
eliminating the need for further construction of fossil fuel based
power plants. Excess electrical production can also be used to
produce hydrgen from electrolysis and H2O, providing the fuel
necessary for fuel cell vehicles. Whenever hydrogen is consumed
as a fuel source, the question must be asked - was it produced
cleanly? The importance of distributed power generation
replacing our current system of large, centralized power plants
isn't getting enough attention. The advantages of producing the
energy nearer the location of it's consumption not only
minimizes wasteful distribution losses, but hardens our energy
infrastructure to attack from man and nature. If we add to the
mix other technologies, especially wind, that are sited based on
the geographical advantage of the particular technology, we get
a real-world solution that can convert the US from a energy
consuming nation to a world leader in energy production. The
naysayers point to individual weaknesses of each energy
generation method as if they stand alone, and as if technology
doesn't get refined with widespread use. We have to use all of
the options available to us, including the shorter-term fixes of
gas-electric hybrid vehicles and clean diesel engines if we are to
fully realize the benefits of technology as applied to our world's
energy and environmental challenges. This is the energy future
that we should strive to bequeath to our children.
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