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Power Earth Technology

Giving Up Alternating Current 466

An anonymous reader writes: Yesterday we discussed Soylent, the artificial food substitute created by Rob Rhinehart and his team. As it turns out, this isn't Rhinehart's only unusual sustainability project. In a new post, he explains how he gave up on alternating current — a tough proposition for anyone living in the U.S. and still interested in using all sorts of modern technology. Rhinehart says, "Most power in the US is generated by burning coal, immediately squandering 67% of its energy, then run through a steam turbine, losing another 50%, then sent across transmission lines, losing another 5%, then to charge a DC device like a cell phone another 50% is lost in conversion. This means for 100 watts of coal or oil burned my phone gets a mere 16."

The biggest hindrance was the kitchen. As you might expect for the creator of Soylent, he doesn't cook, and was able to get rid of almost all kitchen appliances because of that. He uses a butane stove for hot beverages. He powers a small computer off batteries, which get their energy from solar panels. For intensive tasks, he remotes to more powerful machines. He re-wired his apartment's LED lighting to run off direct current. Have any of you made similar changes? How much of an effect does this really have?
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Giving Up Alternating Current

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  • Outdoor (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @02:49PM (#50251021)

    It's the new outdoor trend anyway. All the lighting is obviously LED, so no problem there, the gadgets all transform their AC to DC anyway, so no problem there as well, you just need a decent lab trafo.

    Washers and dryers that use solar heated water are no problem either, they mix warm and cold as they need it.
    Even the small 12 Volt Camping washing machines work very well nowadays.

    You cook by gas and use a gas refrigeration unit as well.

    There's a German project the 'direct current house' (in German obviously)
    http://www.dasgleichstromhaus.... [dasgleichstromhaus.de]

    They have solved many problems.

    • Re:Outdoor (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Technician ( 215283 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:14PM (#50251269)

      Due to the very poor selection of DC appliances and often their RV bloated price tags, I have opted to keep AC, but generate it locally. Instead of buying a DC to DC supply for a laptop to get 19V for about $100, I bought a 1KW inverter instead for about the same price. If I don't want all my lights to be Fluorescent Cool White in color, I can use the 9W 3K bulbs instead in a warm white with high Color Rendering Index >94%. Try it. Try to find 12V RV bulbs that are not Amber, Red, or Cool White 6K. Most of the outlets in my RV are running off the inverter. Only the kitchen and bath loop are still on traditional shore power or generator along with the AC. This limits the generator runtime where shore power is not handy.

      I have not trimmed my home use enough yet to cut loose from the grid. Heat pumps and long wet winters on solar just is not a match yet. They haven't fixed the solar when the sun doesn't shine problem yet.

      I don't have to mess around with trying to adapt everything to 12 or 24V. With a good size deep cycle battery, even normal microwave oven, blow dryer, other short duration high amperage loads are possible that is simply not an option on DC.

      • Due to the very poor selection of DC appliances and often their RV bloated price tags,

        Smaller market means lower production numbers means higher cost per unit. Then, there is the wealthy segment of the RV market who is willing to pay higher prices. At present, big margins on less sales brings a better return than increased sales with low margins.

      • Re:Outdoor (Score:5, Informative)

        by cptdondo ( 59460 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @07:26PM (#50253019) Journal

        As someone who works in the RV industry, you're right to some extent. But also, appliances in houses do not get shaken, bumped, subjected to temps from well below freezing to 120*F, so the testing and quality is far more stringent.

        Lastly, we use a lot of appliances common to boats, and durability and repairability are also important. You can't go to Walmart when you're on a boat; you fix, patch, or do without.

        Our customers who installed dorm fridges because RV fridges are too expensive have found that the dorm fridges don't last too long.

  • by chriskovo ( 1011723 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @02:51PM (#50251033)
    Shouldn't it be powered by his sense of self importance? Or at least by PEOPLE!!
    • by s.petry ( 762400 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:48PM (#50252127)

      I was waiting to read about how AC kills and see some good ole electric chair demonstrations.. *sigh*

      • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @05:50PM (#50252525) Journal

        What I find most annoying about all this is less the could of smug, and more the fact that household electricity use is such a small slice of the pie of overall US energy use. From wind power to this DC nonsense, it's obsessing on feelgood measures of little importance to the big picture.

        This biggest slice of the pie is industrial energy use where electricity isn't part of the picture: "Primary energy use" by heavy industry for blast furnaces and the like. Industrial electricity use is the next biggest slice, followed by IIRC industrial transportation.

    • Ars tore that goof a new one.

      Only HERE would his silly drivel be taken seriously.

      I think he has been chugging too much soy.

  • Nonsense (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @02:53PM (#50251059)

    He's still living on the electrical grid, he's just not using it at home.

    Also, WTF? "I enjoy doing laundry about as much as doing dishes. I get my clothing custom made in China for prices you would not believe and have new ones regularly shipped to me."

    • Re: Nonsense (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @02:59PM (#50251113)

      Wow I didn't even make it that far. This guy is clearly an idiot. He didn't get rid of his dirty fuel burning ways, he just outsourced them to others. Ordering new clothes is way worse than washing some. And as far as this soylent stuff is concerned wasn't it proven that supplements aren't very good and you need actual food to be healthy? Absorption rates of supplements aren't good from what I read and they should be used to supplement an actual healthy diet.

      • Re: Nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Talderas ( 1212466 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:26PM (#50251387)

        And as far as this soylent stuff is concerned wasn't it proven that supplements aren't very good and you need actual food to be healthy? Absorption rates of supplements aren't good from what I read and they should be used to supplement an actual healthy diet.

        Why do you think he's making such questionable choices regarding dirty fuel burning ways?

      • It appears that DC razors only do one side of the face properly.

        See the bits at the sides (well, one of them) that normally make it into a Fu Manchu/Charles Bronson jobbie [washingtonpost.com]

        His looks an unfastened padlock, the twat.

      • Re: Nonsense (Score:4, Insightful)

        by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:31PM (#50251443)
        The line losses are a NIMBY problem, people don't want power plants near their houses.

        The fuel-source problem is people not being willing to pay for more expensive renewables, or in electing politicians that oppose them while continuing to subsidize fossil-fuels.

        Those things can be fixed only if people as groups are willing to accept these differences and their costs, or if someone decides to put solar panels, at increasing personal expense given the utility companies' objections, on their property.
        • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:35PM (#50252003) Journal

          The line losses are a NIMBY problem, people don't want power plants near their houses.

          That's not really true. Coal-fired power plants need to be located near a large, reliable water source for cooling and the closer they are to their fuel source the less energy is used to transport the coal. They also have to be of a certain size in order to operate efficiently. Hence even if everyone was willing to tolerate a coal fired power station in their neighbourhood most locations would be unsuitable for their construction, rural communities would be too small to warrant a power station even if suitable and even then there would be an increase in the energy to ship the coal the larger distances required. This means that only small reductions in transmission losses would be possible and since this is already one of the most efficient steps in the power consumption process you'd lose a lot more than you would gain.

      • Re: Nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)

        by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:39PM (#50251507)

        Wow I didn't even make it that far. This guy is clearly an idiot. He didn't get rid of his dirty fuel burning ways, he just outsourced them to others. Ordering new clothes is way worse than washing some. And as far as this soylent stuff is concerned wasn't it proven that supplements aren't very good and you need actual food to be healthy? Absorption rates of supplements aren't good from what I read and they should be used to supplement an actual healthy diet.

        Exactly. He "cut his consumption" down by externalizing it all. Basically pushing it off somewhere else and hiding it.

        That's like every other company out there - they pollute because the cost of pollution is basically free - the cost is externalized (well, it was until Obama introduced those regulations). When people complain about the "cost of complyihg" it means they're no longer externalizing the cost (free) and now having to pay for it.

        Basically this idiot is making himself feel better by making society worse. He doesn't do laundry - but the charity he donates clothes is forced to do it. He's basically pushed the environmental impact, energy and cost of laundry onto some other 3rd party. Or if they deem it too dirty, they'll just toss it in the garbage. To him, he's "in the clear" still because he didn't throw it away directly.

        Basically, the stuff this guy did was offload onto someone else - you can conceptualize this by asking - what happens if EVERYOHE did it? If it's truly for the environment, then if everyone did it, we'd be better off. If not, then no, it's not as good.

        For an example - say check your tire pressure - most people will probably be on the slightly low side. But if everyone then pumped their tires to the right pressure, society benefits from the reduced fuel consumption, cleaner air (less fuel, less pollutants, etc). That's a real net plus.

        Using less energy - that's a good thing too - or more renewables. But if you're claiming your coal-powered server in a datacenter isn't your concern if you remote into it, well...

        What this guy did would be like RMS asking someone to open Microsoft Word for him because he needs to do something, while claiming to be only using free software. (Yes, I know RMS doesn't do this, but it's an example).

        Plus, I'm sure he's got the income to support this kind of lifestyle - enough to make a point, but really, I think I'd give it to the climate change deniers. For they can poke enough holes in his "living arrangements" to basically say "if we agree to cut back, look at how we'll live - and look ,he's not even green if he needs all that stuff!".

        I'd say he's among the worst kind of "environmentalist" around - a green-washer.

        • Re: Nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)

          by WolfWithoutAClause ( 162946 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:47PM (#50252121) Homepage

          No, careful here. Outsourcing CAN actually improve the environmental aspects of what you do.

          For example, centralised servers have far more chance of being run by renewables than your home computer. Google for example, is tending to do stuff like build their servers near hydroelectric plants or where there's wind farms or solar available.

          So outsourcing your needs CAN actually be a good thing; and if everyone did it, it's a net positive.

      • Exactly.

        Worrying about the amount of waste in the conversion is ridiculous when you compare it to the amount of waste you incur when you try to buy off brand DC items.

        I pay the electric company 8% extra to get the power from renewable sources/burning trash. Problem solved, no off brand anything.

      • Re: Nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Tailhook ( 98486 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:07PM (#50251737)

        he just outsourced them to others

        How is that different than what we're doing to ourselves as a matter of policy? Every time we tighten the screws on some industrial chemical or fossil fuel we simply chase another industry to Asia or damn up another Canadian river. He's just following this pattern on an individual level.

    • Re:Nonsense (Score:5, Funny)

      by jandrese ( 485 ) <kensama@vt.edu> on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:54PM (#50251637) Homepage Journal
      It's a real shame this guy hasn't found a generator that can run off of his sense of self satisfaction. It would end his energy problems forever.
  • by FictionPimp ( 712802 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @02:53PM (#50251061) Homepage

    "For intensive tasks, he remotes to more powerful machines".

    So he can't survive without it....

    • by MikeDataLink ( 536925 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:08PM (#50251205) Homepage Journal

      Exactly my thought. That is cheating. That's like not owning a car, and then riding in taxis the exact amount you'd have driven.

      • by ciaran2014 ( 3815793 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:17PM (#50251297) Homepage

        If you had to remote to another machine for every intensive task, do you think you'd maintain the same volume of intensive tasks?

        In summary, he reduced a bunch of things to zero, and another heap got reduced greatly, and then some smart aleck comes along and says he did nothing because this thing over here didn't get reduced much. Someone's missing the point.

      • Exactly my thought. That is cheating. That's like not owning a car, and then riding in taxis the exact amount you'd have driven.

        Which he does. Well, he uses Uber instead of taxis, but the idea is the same.

    • Computers to include large data centers run on DC power at the machine level. BIG datacenters like Facebook and Twitter have custom racks and servers that do not have AC power supplies. The Racks are fed DC power and that is distributed to the machines. Now most of the DC comes from a AC source be this lets them put together a high efficeny AC-DC converter. They can also use solar power directly. AC power advantage is when transmitting over long distances. DC power requires superconductors to be tran
      • DC is better for transmission lines. Google "HVDC"
        AC is easier to manage. It's easier to switch and convert. To switch high voltage DC mechanically you need physically large switches, since any arcs generated will be sustained by the DC current flow. With AC is gets stopped at the end of the cycle.

    • by MrDoh! ( 71235 )
      Hmm, would it help if remoting to a datacenter in the NorthWest being powered/cooled by hydro? Ok, still the comms gear local but perhaps we can shift resources to where the power is with a bit of smarts. Sync'd machines over the US to take advantage of where the sun/wind/hydro is most efficient! Makes little sense in small scales, but scaling up, doable perhaps (depending on the tasks).
  • Stone Age... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    So he gave up refrigeration?
    an ac synchronous motor is much more efficient than DC alternatives.

    Why doesn’t he just use a gas stove?
    At that point why heat drinks at all? It’s wastefull.
    His low power computer? He’s just using AC remotely.

    Why not just move to a mud hut in east Africa?

    • I don't think the OP even thought this through this far and is an obviously trash post, but for the sake of discussion I looked at a solar panel house and there are dc washing machines and refrigerators that work off of propane instead of electricity. It's actually pretty interesting... the biggest issue was there was no electricity for the well pump and water had to be trucked in so we passed on the house.

      • Re:Stone Age... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:19PM (#50251315) Homepage Journal

        the biggest issue was there was no electricity for the well pump and water had to be trucked in so we passed on the house.

        You can get a solar well pump too, meaning DC and either 12 or 24V. But presumably, you'd have needed to expand the solar system for that purpose. It also works best when you have a water storage tank sufficiently elevated above the point of use to produce useful pressure, because then you can make hay (or pump water, anyway) while the sun shines, and you don't need a bunch of battery — or, potentially, any.

        • I think the one they had installed was 120v and replacing the pump was several thousand bucks... don't remember the details. (10+ years ago) Also running a 12v line with the amps to handle the load 50 or so yrds would have been costly. I guess there was some bad planning on the part of whoever built the house and solar was not nearly as advanced a decade ago.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )
          Yeah, that seems like a rather silly argument if that was the principal reason for not buying an otherwise appealing property. Humans have had methods to raise water for literally thousands of years. Adapting one to an unpowered well shouldn't be that difficult or expensive.
      • I live on solar off grid. It's easily do-able, but maybe 5% more inconvenient which makes it a non-starter for most people. I have a big inverter and run all regular appliances, including standard full size dishwasher, double refrigerator, etc from Home Depot. I have 30A to use (never needed anywhere close to that).

        AC simplifies wiring, allows you to buy standard, mass produced appliances rather than specialty products that come with a whole host of problems. Who do you call when your semi custom dishwashe

      • Re:Stone Age... (Score:4, Informative)

        by mlts ( 1038732 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:08PM (#50251761)

        I've looked at an off grid cabin for weekend vacations. A few portable propane cylinders would cover the fridge (assuming a pound/liter of LP gas a day), and it would also cover a water heater.

        Solar wouldn't be cheap, but for a few thousand, I could place a number of solar panels, have them feed in via 1-2 decent MPPT controllers into a set of AGM batteries (so watering the batteries isn't an issue), then have a decent PSW inverter coming off for use. Because lead-acid batteries destroy themselves if they go under 50% SoC, take the expected ampere-hours you plan to use, and double it, at the least. This would easily handle almost anything but heating/cooling and the well pump (which can use 1500-2000 watts each.)

        The trick with the well pump and an off-grid cabin, would be to run a generator so the pump can move water into an above ground storage tank 250-2500 gallons, then from there, a much smaller pump that runs from 12 volts can pump water from the tank into the cabin.

        Of course, come Texas summers, that is what a generator is for on a weekend basis. I can get 8-20 hours of use from three gallons of gasoline in a 3000 watt Yamaha inverter generator, and for a small cabin, a 10k BTU A/C is more than enough to cool it down, assuming some semblance of insulation [1]. As an added bonus, with a converter (rectifier), it is a way to help keep the batteries topped off if the panels can't keep up with use.

        Disclaimer: This is a vacation cabin. For a real house, it would cost over $40,000 for a solar panel setup that can handle the amp draw of the well pump and the A/C.

        Of course, there are other items like waste water (I like using a cassette toilet and having cartridges on hand, since those can be dumped down the commode safely and legally once back home, and gray water can be filtered and recycled in a settling tank so it doesn't destroy the ground around it.)

        [1]: Ironic thing is that if solar panels are mounted with air space between them and the rest of the roof, they function as shade, doing a decent job at keeping the place cooler, even though the panels are likely at around 150 degrees (66 degrees C) on a hot day.

  • this experiment is fine if you're doing little LED lights and laptops, but if you're running something like air conditioning or a washing machine you're building a fire hazard and a mortality risk

    the decision to use AC over DC was not random nor taken lightly, there are many factors involved (heck, it was a major engineering, corporate, and PR war between Edison and Westinghouse: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] ), but the right decision was made

    for our modern world where some people only care about their laptop and smartphone, it does indeed seem silly and wasteful to convert to AC then back to DC, especially if you've ever tried charging electronics in a car. but there are of course many other uses for electricity, and the navel gazing small electronics crowd is but a minor topic

    but i do see a time in the future as more people use local solar and other renewables, that a small DC subsystem is made available in the house for electronics like computers

    • this experiment is fine if you're doing little LED lights and laptops, but if you're running something like air conditioning or a washing machine you're building a fire hazard and a mortality risk

      AC and DC are both dangerous. We chose AC because it was cheaper at the time. These days you can do low-current MPPT for a song, so you can convert between DC voltages relatively efficiently. But just generating AC from DC was expensive at the time when we had to choose between them.

      for our modern world where some people only care about their laptop and smartphone, it does indeed seem silly and wasteful to convert to AC then back to DC, especially if you've ever tried charging electronics in a car.

      Well, they do make converters specifically for that purpose, and they are not so inefficient as using the cheapest possible inverter which fits in your soda can hole coupled with your laptop's normal power supply. Also, cars rea

      • by TWX ( 665546 )
        AC has one significant advantage in that it generates much less heat on the wire, and the higher voltages, within reason, allow for smaller wires to do the same work, as wire size need is a function of amps.
        • AC has one significant advantage in that it generates much less heat on the wire, and the higher voltages, within reason, allow for smaller wires to do the same work, as wire size need is a function of amps.

          Except now that it's cost-effective to regulate DC to relatively arbitrary voltages, we can use HVDC... or just relatively high voltages. For example, some automobiles are beginning to move to 48V because they can use much smaller wiring, saving weight.

          The prohibitive cost and lack of efficiency in DC to DC conversion really was the sole reason AC won. It was practical. Today, we are using more and more DC in our long-haul links. But the same technology that makes it feasible to use DC also makes AC cheaper

          • HVDC only makes sense on very long haul links. Line losses are lower, but the conversion stations arte much, much, MUCH more expensive, than a few turns of copper wrapped around a chunk of iron and immersed in oil. Also, AC ssystems behave as an infinite bus bar more or less and you can put in and extract energy equally easily at any point. That's much harder with HVDC.

            The cost and difficulties assosciated with HVDC aren't going to displace AC in the small to medium haul any time soon.

        • thank you, dc genuinely has greater fire hazard implications than ac

          as for health, it is a bit more nuanced and complex than i said:

          Direct current (DC), because it moves with continuous motion through a conductor, has the tendency to induce muscular tetanus quite readily. Alternating current (AC), because it alternately reverses direction of motion, provides brief moments of opportunity for an afflicted muscle to relax between alternations. Thus, from the concern of becoming "froze on the circuit," DC is mo

    • actually, high voltage DC is far more efficient for long distances, so countries like India are going to that

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:53PM (#50251627)

      DC arcs are strongly self-sustaining once ignited, as there's nothing to halt the continuous generation of ions which provide an easy conductive path. In contrast, AC arcs tend to self-extinguish twice a cycle when the voltage drops to zero, and so the AC arc has to re-ignite each cycle once the voltage rises high enough. Even if it does manage to re-ignite, the arc is not usually conducting the full cycle.

      This reduced arcing makes AC a significantly lower fire hazard than DC, and the same effect happens to make AC switch contacts last much longer since breaking a circuit rarely arcs for more than a half cycle so contacts don't usually heat up and little metal is carried away from their surfaces.

  • by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:00PM (#50251129)

    I respect the man for having ideals and trying to live up to them.

    Of course he has fresh water. That comes from his pipes. Some requires transport from the Colorado River and that uses fuel. Some requires desalination from the Pacific Ocean and that uses fuel. With a water bill comes a related sewer bill. Sewer and effluent treatment require chemicals and fuel.

    Of course he has batteries. That's how his solar cell provides his DC power. Both solar cells and batteries cost exotic chemicals/components, and take fuel to produce. Solar cells don't degrade as much over time but the typical deep-cycle battery requires replacement every 24-36 months [depending on the charge, cycle, use, etc.]. This also applies to the TMO cellphone battery he uses to power his TMO Internet.

    Of course he buys his clothes from China - has them shipped - and throws away old clothes. This way instead of using water and detergent and some electricity (or some 25 coins and a laundramatt) he uses a lot of jet fuel, some delivery truck fuel, throws away cardboard boxes and plastic wrappers (think hydrocarbons which could be used as fuel, and fuel itself). He feels better because he donates his old clothes. I'm not sure that he thought about this much because ***ALL THE OLD CLOTHES HE DONATES ARE WASHED BY GOODWILL*** or whomever prior to putting on the shelf. So he costs the environment more, not less.

    Lastly... that TMO Internet again... he is one of the people who encourages TMO to have towers. Towers have little generators on them so they don't lose power in storms, power outages, etc. Those use fuel which goes bad after a year and must be replaced. That means once a year cellphone tower generator fuel tanks are purged and dumped and new fuel is acquired and put in the tank. [Yes, some carriers have a 2yr schedule and some don't discuss their schedule, but if we're talking ideal... here you go.]

    It's good to have ideals. It's nice try and live by them.

    Ehud Gavron
    Tucson, AZ, where 4 months out of the year the temperature is above 100F and the humidity above 40% so if you don't have an air-conditioner using direct-expansion gas (not a "swamp-cooler" or "mister") you will bake. They don't make any that run on DC. Even if they did, that would be a LOT of solar cells!

    • by Holi ( 250190 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:11PM (#50251239)
      The typical deep-cycle battery does NOT need to be retired in 24 to 26 months lead acid deep-cycle batteries are more like 4 to 8 years longer if you treat them well. If you want to double that spend a little more (ok a lot) and get surrette deep cycle batteries, typical lifespan range is 7 to 15 years.
    • by Nemesisghost ( 1720424 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:27PM (#50251417)
      Yeah, and I love that he thinks eating paste or eating out is actually using less energy that simply cooking fresh food that's locally sourced. Heck, growing a garden is trivial, even in an apartment and would reduce your carbon footprint, save energy, and cost you much much less. And I'm sure there are storage methods that would allow you to get rid of both your fridge & your stove if you really wanted to. But this guy didn't want to do that. His lifestyle is not about saving anything, but showing how much better he is than the rest of us plebes.
    • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:49PM (#50251593)

      Tucson, AZ, where 4 months out of the year the temperature is above 100F and the humidity above 40% so if you don't have an air-conditioner using direct-expansion gas (not a "swamp-cooler" or "mister") you will bake. They don't make any that run on DC. Even if they did, that would be a LOT of solar cells!

      Actually they do make one with an AC/DC dual voltage motor. Lennox sells one. It's ridiculously expensive without even including the panels, but it was an option that we looked into a couple of years ago when we had to relace a 2.5 ton unit that had failed. The replacement alternating current model has a 30A circuit breaker on a 240VAC circuit, so it can draw a max of 7200 Watts. This 8000W system would be enough to power that air conditioner and have some to spare. [anapode.com]

      I have enough roof space for probably 40,000W of panels. The thing causing me to hold back is the electric utility. I want grid-tie with intentional islanding and battery storage if the grid loses power, and I don't want to get hammered with utility company fees like they're trying to get out of us if we go that route. I'd also like to get reimbursed a fair rate for the power I'd supply back to the grid during peak usage, but they're not interested in doing that either. I'm hoping that Solar City wins their lawsuit against the utility so that I can feel comfortable proceeding at some point down the road with this.

      • I have enough roof space for probably 40,000W of panels.

        You have a big roof! Wish I had that much room!

        The thing causing me to hold back is the electric utility. I want grid-tie with intentional islanding and battery storage if the grid loses power, and I don't want to get hammered with utility company fees like they're trying to get out of us if we go that route. I'd also like to get reimbursed a fair rate for the power I'd supply back to the grid during peak usage, but they're not interested in doing that either.

        In fairness, the electric utility isn't completely wrong in wanting a fair shake.

        For example, are you asking for net-metering where they pay you retail for your power, or are you asking for wholesale rates when you sell them back your power? The former is not reasonable, the latter is totally reasonable.

        Generally grid-tie systems need to shut down automatically when the power goes out, this is for the safety of the linemen working on the downed lines.

  • by jabberw0k ( 62554 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:01PM (#50251133) Homepage Journal
    No birthday cakes, no cherry pies, no fresh baked bread, no roast pork with caramelized potatoes, no steaks, no cauliflower broccoli cheese casserole, not even any homemade French onion soup? I shudder to think what Julia Child would say to that.
  • These changes... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Pollux ( 102520 ) <speter@tedat[ ]et.eg ['a.n' in gap]> on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:01PM (#50251135) Journal

    He doesn't cook, and was able to get rid of almost all kitchen appliances because of that. He uses a butane stove for hot beverages. He powers a small computer off batteries, which get their energy from solar panels. For intensive tasks, he remotes to more powerful machines. He re-wired his apartment's LED lighting to run off direct current. Have any of you made similar changes?

    No. I have a wife.

  • by mykepredko ( 40154 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:02PM (#50251147) Homepage

    saying "Excellent".

  • by vadim_t ( 324782 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:03PM (#50251159) Homepage

    Sounds like he's badly confusing something. I think he's badly misunderstanding how a rectifier works. Some waste of course happens, but not nearly that much.

    • by slowdeath ( 2836529 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:15PM (#50251281)

      No where near 50% is lost these days in modern AC/DC or DC/AC conversion devices.
      Solar panel DC/AC inverters run at 95% to 98% conversion efficiency.
      Likewise modern AC/DC converters can easily achieve 90 to 95% conversion efficiency.
      Unless he uses very bulky low voltage, high current cables, he could easily be losing 3-5% of transmitted DC power in those.

      He would be better off keeping his residence on AC and covering his roof with as many solar panels as he can fit.

    • by stackOVFL ( 1791898 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:15PM (#50251283)
      Yeah, your right. The low efficiency of a DC power supply is in the 80% range. http://www.xppower.com/pdfs/TA... [xppower.com]
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Yeah, I raised an eyebrow at that, too. A properly designed switching power supply, even a small one, can be >90% efficient, as opposed to a linear supply with even an LDO linear regulator, which wastes power as heat.
  • by Media Archivist ( 3478167 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:04PM (#50251165) Homepage

    He has decided upon a very specific, and limiting, style of living. Bravo. Now try applying his philosophy to a household with children. Or a household frequented by guests. Try this in less sunny locales.

    I think it is admirable to try to be different, and to advocate alternative. I am completely turned off by his holier than thou attitude and his dismissiveness towards that which does not fit his chosen lifestyle.

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:07PM (#50251195)

    queue up the Thomas Edison/Tesla fanbois out there the current wars [youtube.com] have returned.

  • by ibpooks ( 127372 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:08PM (#50251199) Homepage

    Okay, sure so DC for gadgets and lighting that consume about 1% of household energy. When he has a realistic solution for replacing central heating, cooling, refrigeration, normal kitchen usage, well pumps, water heating and other meaningful uses of electricity then it might be worth listening to.

  • "No" and "Who gives a shit" respectively. Show us that the conversions needed to do this provide enough financial benefit to make any sort of sense. I don't think it will pencil out.

    • Speaking of giving a shit; the story mentions he drinks more red wine and so uses the restroom less but I'm surprise he didn't regale the reader with a story of the composting toilet he installed in his apartment.

  • by ZombieBraintrust ( 1685608 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:13PM (#50251259)
    This guy is not washing his cloths. He is wearing them till they are dirty. Then he donates them unwashed somewhere. (I assume he tosses his underwear, or wears diapers)
  • I have a detached structure that runs entirely off solar/batteries. (There being no legal way to run power to it -- long story.) For the one or two things that actually require A/C I have an industrial inverter, but I try to use it for as few things as possible. To that end, all the lights are 12 volt DC.

    I didn't have to rewire anything -- you can get 12 volt bulbs (even CFLs) that screw into standard sockets at any RV supply store.

    The plugs in the wall of the structure are car-type cigarette-lighter rou

  • by bobmajdakjr ( 2484288 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:14PM (#50251273)
    Most of his personal savings just offload the burden of destruction to someone else, like taking uber (fossil fuels) and donating dirty clothes (water use, and being a scumbag donating dirty things) such that I was not entirely sure this was not satire.
    • well to be fair the donation chains wash what is put into the drop boxes regardless

      the guy is still a douche for other reasons, adopting his ways for anyone with wife and kids would be quick divorce court path

  • Many EU cities now specify LED street lights and this does usually include whole streets being converted to DC.
    I've heard of some 40% efficiency gains by avoiding the usual transformers per lamppost.
    On a private scale you could start by buying electronics that run on a specific DC voltage and making a home circuit run off a solar charged battery.
    This last one is a specific requirement to have an efficient system, although a large single rectifier is better than many small ones you're still better off wit
  • by Nemesisghost ( 1720424 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:18PM (#50251303)
    I've read this guy's blog post & came to the conclusion that he's an idiot. He champions his lifestyle as a way to reduce energy usage, but does so by doing things like having new shirts shipped from China instead of doing laundry. Or that he's saving energy by eating out when he doesn't want to eat his nutritional paste, and somehow that's better than cooking for yourself mainly because he doesn't like going to the grocery store. Nothing this guy has done is scalable beyond just himself.
    This guys whole blog post reads almost like someone saying it's better to have a 3d printer because you can print Lego bricks for free.
  • ...actually recapture lost Gas Turbine work. So running through a steam turbine is actually very, very good for the overall efficiency of the cycle.

  • Rhinehart is not substantially reducing his reliance on AC, all he is doing is passing it on to others in the service industries.

    I gagged at the sentence in the conclusion "To me the real upside is the pleasure in being electrically self reliant." - I guess he could live off the land as long as there were supermarkets around.

    I don't believe that going to a restaurant and letting them provide meals, lighting, heat/AC actually constitutes reducing the amount of AC consumed.

  • Many parts of the 3rd world are off the grid, yet aspire to a modern lifestyle. His experiences could very well lead to products targeting this emerging market.

  • Anyone with an actual degree in engineering is calling bullshit.

    There's nothing magical about AC-DC conversion, and NEWS FLASH, it's much more efficient to transmit AC over long distances than DC. That's HALF THE REASON we use AC. The other half is that it's extremely easy to convert to other forms of AC and DC.

    This guy is a moron. You want more efficient power? Go Nuke and enjoy ZERO CO2 EMISSIONS you tree hugging hippy. At that point, you know what happens when you "lose energy from steam turbines"? N
    • There's nothing magical about AC-DC conversion, and NEWS FLASH, it's much more efficient to transmit AC over long distances than DC. That's HALF THE REASON we use AC. The other half is that it's extremely easy to convert to other forms of AC and DC.

      I'm afraid my degree is in physics, though I've done more engineering than pure research oriented work. In my understanding, long distance transmission efficiency is mainly about high voltage, not AC per se. It's true that you need some AC stages for voltage conversion, so the conversion part is more efficient if you only use AC. However, AC will bleed energy via induction in some cases such as undersea cables, making DC more efficient overall even after conversion losses. In addition, phase matching is an

  • not practical (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @03:27PM (#50251405)

    Getting rid of AC for off grid applications makes sense. I'm all for it and look forward to the new DC appliances we're seeing come on market.

    however, this article is not going to have people following suit.

    I'm not giving up my quality of life. I don't have to and I don't want to and its the 21st century so anyone that disagrees can eat a rail gun round to the face.

    I do believe in sustainable living. However, more in the way of breaking free from crumbling infrustructure and gaining a certain amount of logistical indepedence.

    I'm a big believer in the backyard green house. I think solar panels and wind mills are a good idea AT YOUR HOUSE. And I am looking forward to economical energy storage systems that work at a personal level.

    Am I dumping my refrigerator and cooking food on a camping stove? No.

    Really none of this sustainable stuff works in an urban environment. Its sort of odd that so many people that like the idea live in the one place where it isn't possible. Logistically you're going to be depending on a very energy and resource intensive infrastructure and there's just no way around that in a city. That "IS" the city. The city is all the things the sustainable people say they don't like. Live in the suburbs and you have a CHOICE. You have enough property that you can do something. Live rural and you can go completely off grid for everything... food, water, power, whatever... live like the Amish or something. Yabba dabba doo. But in a city you're on the grid. I don't care if you shut off the breakers in your apartment or drink your own pee. You're on the grid because everyone around you is on the grid and you depend on them whether you're drinking your own pee or not.

    Here is my suggestion for the urbanites. Support nuclear power. Worship the fucking atom.

  • ...your adapter is a piece of shit. A good one will give you 80% to 90%. I'll assume his other figures have similar accuracy.

  • If you want to be sustainable then focus on how you can stop burning coal and natural gas to generate electricity.

  • quote: "Most power in the US is generated by burning coal..."

    Coal dropped below 50% several years ago and is falling rapidly. Alpha Natural Resources -- one of the giants of the American coal industry -- has filed for bankruptcy. They're sitting on $3 billion in debt while coal prices have plummeted as a result of utilities switching over to natural gas.

    As for the whole DC power thing... If you have rooftop solar, and you are generating your own DC power, then converting it to AC and then back to DC aga

  • by technical_maven ( 2756487 ) <tom@tg[ ]rg ['t.o' in gap]> on Tuesday August 04, 2015 @04:30PM (#50251965)
    The problem with Rob's assessment is that his efficiency numbers, expect for power transmission, are way off the mark. It is MUCH better than he purports! DC to AC conversion is roughly 90% or more efficient these days so you are not saving much by using DC at home rather than AC. It is simply not worth it to limit yourself so much by having only DC appliances.

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