The Caveman, the Devil’s Tools, and the Grid (Encore)

The Caveman, the Devil’s Tools, and the Grid (Encore)

25 Minuten

Beschreibung

vor 1 Jahr

Two teenagers are having a private moment in the hills above a
utility substation when suddenly they happen upon a terrorist
intent on bringing down their local grid. Will the teens escape
and defeat the terrorist? Yes, but only with the help of
modern-day cleantech resources...

True Solar Takeaways


Terrorists have been attempting to disrupt the grid by firing
rifle shots at the transformers of utility substations. Here are
some news clips about these incidents:

FBI thwarts neo-Nazi plot to attack Baltimore Gas &
Electric substations, ‘completely destroy’ city 

Mass power outage in North Carolina caused by gunfire,
repairs could take days

Attacking the grid



Yes, indeed. There is a "Smart Summon" mode on your Tesla,
but you need to be close by. Behold. 

The smart homes of the future are here, not in the future.
There are many, many companies that offer app connections that
can control just about anything in your house through wi-fi and
smart plugs, including the coffee maker, the TV,  lights,
stereos, and of course garage door openers. Pretty much
everything. 

If you've only installed solar on your roof, you will
generally not be able to use the solar generation, even if the
blackout occurs when the sun is shining. That's because your
solar power will backfeed into the grid and endanger the
line-people who are fixing transmission wires, so your inverter
will cut off your solar production. There are a few inverters
that will "island" and route power to your home and not the grid.
Check with your installer.

If you want your solar power to back you up, day or night,
you'll need to install a battery. 

However, whole home backup is rare--and expensive. Instead,
you can tell your solar+battery installer about the "critical
loads" that will be available during a blackout, and he'll
configure your battery to keep those things running. Typically,
it's the lights, refrigerator, and other small appliances. The
size of your battery will partly determine how many hours those
things will stay on. Of course, the more things you use during a
blackout, the fewer hours of backup battery usage you'll have.
Also, if you include high-intensity loads like air conditioning
or a pool pump, you'll quickly use up your battery power in very
few hours.



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