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23-07-2013, 03:56 AM | #121 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 5,289
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I would'nt bother directly changing my hot water system to gas but, I think if the old one was to die I would look at fitting a gas powered one while I have the Nat Gas line out the front of the house. Every bit of saving adds up!
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23-07-2013, 07:26 AM | #122 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 282
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It doesn't change my perception but it does cause me to suspect the validity of the original claim. I have to assume that by the term MegaWatt this is meant as a megawatt hour and not a megawatt second (a reduction of 1/3600). I would really want to see this as documented or published price to the public domain and not heresay.
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__________________________ They call it a rort when they're not in on it Mark |
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23-07-2013, 01:37 PM | #123 | |||
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Quote:
Errr...it's the same thing. A megawatt per second x 3600 = 1 megawatt/hr. |
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23-07-2013, 02:15 PM | #124 | ||||
Adapt or perish...
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Dip!@#$
Posts: 7,954
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Quote:
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I'll have to check my bill but from what I read on it supply charge is two parts of stuff all.
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Carless
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23-07-2013, 02:27 PM | #125 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 12,077
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Quote:
For the quantity of energy in a simple no-loss non-reactive model that is correct but for tarrif charging in the real world you have no idea at all. The tarrifs are quite complex and involve vas, vars, peak, draw, jitter, time and duration not just simply watts per hour. |
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23-07-2013, 02:33 PM | #126 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 12,077
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Leave the party politics out please
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23-07-2013, 02:39 PM | #127 | |||
IWCMOGTVM Club Supporter
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Northern Suburbs Melbourne
Posts: 17,799
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Quote:
As for the price of electricity and the CT. It really isn't the major cause of the higher prices. Electricity was jumping in price before it and still is.
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Daniel |
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23-07-2013, 02:47 PM | #128 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 1,119
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Anyways i still have the old meter so stuck with the single tarriff of $0.25 k/w. Im not sure if its a good or bad thing as i cant opt for off peak, peak and shoulder tarriffs as i dont have a smart meter.
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23-07-2013, 03:11 PM | #129 | ||||
Regular Member
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 128
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Quote:
Quote:
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SZ TS Territory TDCi '13 WQ LX Fiesta '08 XG Falcon '94 |
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23-07-2013, 07:34 PM | #130 | ||
FG XR6T trayback
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: N-W NSW
Posts: 1,311
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23-07-2013, 11:19 PM | #131 | ||
Nikon
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Wollongong
Posts: 1,875
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Corporation greed is never satisfied
Watch for the next onslaught |
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24-07-2013, 01:41 PM | #132 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 494
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I can only comment on the situation in NSW as I was employed by the previously State owned Electricity Commision of NSW.
In those days we had cheap power and it was very profitable for the government. Power was cheap for a number of reasons - NSW had copious amounts of clean burning, low ash coal, the power stations were strategically located wthin the Southern and Hunter coalfields, and there was a plentiful water supply available. NSW was also leading the world in coal fired thermal power generation technology and we were exporting this technology to other countries including the middle east. The Electricity Commision employed thousands of workers across the state, there was plenty of power and even enough left over to put it into Victoria's grid when the need arose, everyone was happy and then.......................... the NSW government decided that it wanted to eat it's cake too and decided it could get a pile of money by selling the Power Stations to private companies (they wanted to sell the transmission lines too but that's another story) To make the deal look attractive they needed the power stations top show a bigger profit on paper and this started with wholesale retrenchment of employees and their replacement with contractors (at a much higher cost to the tax payers but it showed up in a different set of account books) and the increasing of wholesale pricing of power to the distributors. As well as this the NSW government decided that it was not going to invest in any new power stations and that responsibility for a major part of the existing transmission lines and substations would be handed over to the distributors (Energy Australia etc). As power demand increased and the need for a new base load power station was becoming inevitable, the government did 2 things. One of them was to keep increasing the cost of power and at the same time use these increases as a reason for consumers to try and reduce their power consumption. This just kept skyrocketing though because no matter how much you reduced your useage, the cost still went up. More power was still required but rather than commit to a new coal fired power station and upset the hairy armpitted brigade, they elected to supply a few gas turbine generators at existing power stations that could be fired up at high demand times. Increasing costs to consumers also increased profits and this made the power stations look even better on paper for the big sell off. Overall, there should never have been the need for any of the increases that have occurred over the past 10-15 years - we still had plenty of good coal, the water was still there, the major power stations were still running efficiently, the technology was still current, but the government didn't do any maintenance (it's maintenace workforce was depleted due to retrenchment) and didn't commit to any future infrastructure, but it still took all the profits that should have been going back into this area. end of rant |
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24-07-2013, 02:13 PM | #134 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 282
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Quote:
The contract between end user and supplier doesn't define any of this as they are functions of the meter design. The contract equates watts/hour (whether they are kilowatts, megawatts or gigawatts) with a cost in dollars. In some circumstances time of day metering is in effect - not normally done with megawatt end users other than by contractual claims and historical profiles.
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__________________________ They call it a rort when they're not in on it Mark |
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24-07-2013, 07:59 PM | #135 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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Australia has some of the worlds biggest reserves of uranium and thorium, yet steadfastly denies itself the chance to build the latest-tech safe and clean reactors to power our country cheaply. "Massive amounts" of nuclear waste? Nope...a large power plant produces less than a bucket full a year, and we have one of the most geologically stable continents with vast areas of nothing with deep, deep bedrock to dispose of it safely. Danger to nearby people? Nope...you actually have a far greater danger from radioactivity living near a coal fired plant because of fly ash. Overall safety? No problem...you can't use the three big accidents that everyone screams about as an example of how things should be done...Japan built a reactor right by the coast on a damn fault zone where they always have earthquakes, Chernobyl was fifty year old badly maintained technology run by drunks, Three Mile Island didn't hurt anyone at all, not one person.
France gets 80% of it's power from atomic power...what do they replace it with if they close them down? Germany is closing it's reactors because of green pressure, but is, funnily enough, replacing them with coal fired power stations...that's much better. China is touted as an environmental beacon because they are closing twenty old dirty coal fired stations...but less spoken of is how they are replacing them with over sixty new coal fired stations as well as more nuclear plants. The public has been blatantly lied to by activists and green groups for decades, and unfortunately it will take a LOT to change public opinion. As for our energy, the biggest mistake could be to privatise it all in the name of "efficiency"...because once you have shareholders, only one thing matters, and that's increasing profits, year on year, who cares about the cost to the public. "Green" energy sources are a lie...pure and simple. Solar is wonderful...for individual houses. Wind has more problems than you can list, and none of the alternatives is, well, an alternative to coal or nuclear...none has the constant, on demand, base-load capacity that coal and nuclear have, and probably never will. Last edited by 2011G6E; 24-07-2013 at 08:04 PM. |
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24-07-2013, 09:09 PM | #136 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 282
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Don't seriously quote me on this but I believe the world wide known reserves of uranium ore are somewhat limited at approx 200 years on current consumption. If Aus were to go nuclear generation the reserves would be consumed somewhat quicker, let alone if the rest of the world wanted atomic power. Consumption could also be offset by decommissioning weapons grade plutonium.
The biggest obstacle is the "not in my backyard" syndrome. This worked at Lucas Heights until the neighborhood started being populated with residences and these people have the gall to demand Lucas Heights be decommissioned. By the time you get far enough away from populated areas, your load losses from transmission (wires) become a significant loss. Me personally I agree with Nuc Power but I also work within state government and get a very close view of how the tendering process works - its what I do. Do you really want a nuclear power plant built by the cheapest tenderer? Maybe what should be considered are gas fired turbines combined with solar field technology (mirror farms - not PE cells). The mirror farms can provide the low end energy input coupled with natural gas to top the system off.
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__________________________ They call it a rort when they're not in on it Mark |
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24-07-2013, 09:25 PM | #137 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Mornington peninsula.
Posts: 456
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This is the future...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPPBkhjp1fY
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Proud owner of: 1970 Fairmont XW (waiting for restoration) & my daily Venom red 2003 BA XR6T Nick. |
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24-07-2013, 10:22 PM | #138 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 2,252
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having worked with the UK nuclear industry and had discussions with barbara lady judge the head of the UK Atomic Energy Authority Im nowhere near convinced. the known fuel is very limited and would not satisfy a 100% conversion for current and predicted consumption globally. It would however bridge a gap between fosil fuel use and a renewable future, one that does scare the nuke brigade and fossil fuel lobby as they know their time is limited.
But nuclear going wrong is still better globally then coal when its working fine! But the question needs to be asked do we want to leave a legacy forever for cheap easy solution. is our 20 year economic benefit worth the cost to the next milleneum or two worth of generations to look after our mess. Even if there is no 'disaster' they pay for the upkeep, maintenance and whatever is necessary of our nbuclear waste. Modern reactors are so far pretty well designed, but they still produce waste and risk and as when they get older we don't know the implications. I know when a nuke plant fails I don't want to be anywhere near it...ever, when a coal plant is going right I dont want it anywhere near me, but when renewablkes fail...they fall down, they burst or they sink. no dramas. I believe a mandadted move to renewables with appropriate redeployment of investment capital in our country will save the economy. JP |
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26-07-2013, 07:00 PM | #139 | ||
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26-07-2013, 07:43 PM | #140 | ||
Bolt Nerd
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Ojochal, Costa Rica (Pura Vida!)
Posts: 14,901
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Love a slab on it Zilo?
3600 mw per second = 1 mw per hr. Fact!!
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Current vehicles.. Yamaha Rhino UTV, SWB 4L TJ Jeep, and boring Lhd RAV4 Bionic BF F6... UPDATE: Replaced by Shiro White 370z 7A Roadster. SOLD Workhack: FG Silhouette XR50 Turbo ute (11.63@127.44mph) SOLD 2 wheels.. 2015 103ci HD Wideglide.. SOLD SOLD THE LOT, Voted with our feet and relocated to COSTA RICA for some Pura Vida! (Ex Blood Orange #023 FPV Pursuit owner : ) |
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26-07-2013, 07:52 PM | #141 | ||
Bolt Nerd
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Ojochal, Costa Rica (Pura Vida!)
Posts: 14,901
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Oooops, Other way around
1 mw per second = 3600 mw hr! (5 carltons too many)
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Current vehicles.. Yamaha Rhino UTV, SWB 4L TJ Jeep, and boring Lhd RAV4 Bionic BF F6... UPDATE: Replaced by Shiro White 370z 7A Roadster. SOLD Workhack: FG Silhouette XR50 Turbo ute (11.63@127.44mph) SOLD 2 wheels.. 2015 103ci HD Wideglide.. SOLD SOLD THE LOT, Voted with our feet and relocated to COSTA RICA for some Pura Vida! (Ex Blood Orange #023 FPV Pursuit owner : ) |
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26-07-2013, 10:36 PM | #142 | ||
YE-US! Wait. I don't know
Join Date: May 2010
Location: in the turkey...
Posts: 940
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"Well. Apparently you're looking for a lion-snake named Harriet." Daily: '06 BF XL Ute,Shockwave Blue, Column Shift, eGas BEAST.
Gone: 77 HZ panel van, 253, column. The Weekender: '06 BF Pursuit, Toxic, lumpy af |
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26-07-2013, 11:33 PM | #143 | ||
XY Falcon
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 413
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Units guys... Megawatt hours (MW.h) or megawatt seconds (MW.s) are completely different units to megawatts per hour (MW/h) or megawatts per second (MW/s).
1 MW/h = 1 MW/(s*60*60) 1 MW/h = 1 MW/(s*3600) 3600 MW/h = 1 MW/s 1 MW.h = 1 MW.(s*60*60) 1 MW.h = 1 MW.(s*3600) 1 MW.h = 3600 MW.s 1/3600 MW.h = 1 MW.s
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_________________ 1971 XY Falcon 500 Last edited by karj; 26-07-2013 at 11:40 PM. |
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