Switzerland Is Turning the Gap Between Train Tracks Into a 'Solar Carpet' (fastcompany.com) 130
Swiss start-up Sun-Ways has developed a concept to install solar panels between train tracks, using a specially built train to "unroll" the panels during the night when fewer trains are running. Fast Company reports: As wild as it all sound, Sun-Ways actually has two competitors. Greenrail and Bankset Energy, respectively located in Italy and England, are already testing similar concepts. But Sun-Ways stands out in two ways. For one, it uses standard-size panels, whereas the others use smaller panels that are placed on top of crossties. And unlike its competitors, Sun-ways doesn't require manual installation. It has a train for that!
Sun-ways is putting this idea to the test during a $560,000 pilot project in Western Switzerland. The pilot, which is slated for this summer, will trial a version of the mechanism using a regular train that's been retrofitted for the occasion. Running on a 140-foot stretch near the city of Neuchatel, the train will install about 60 solar panels, turning the gap between train tracks into a reflective black ribbon.
For now, 100% of the electricity generated by the solar panels will go straight to the grid to power nearby households. But eventually, the team is planning to use some of that electricity to power the very trains that run above the panels. According to Danichert, 5,000 kilometers of "solar rails" (which is the current length of the entire Swiss railroad network) can generate 1 gigawatt of energy per year, or enough energy to power about 750,000 homes. Considering there are over 1 million kilometers of railway tracks worldwide, the potential could be huge, even if the system can't be installed on every one of those tracks. But most importantly, it wouldn't take up any space from farmland or forests, and it wouldn't ruin any landscapes.
Sun-ways is putting this idea to the test during a $560,000 pilot project in Western Switzerland. The pilot, which is slated for this summer, will trial a version of the mechanism using a regular train that's been retrofitted for the occasion. Running on a 140-foot stretch near the city of Neuchatel, the train will install about 60 solar panels, turning the gap between train tracks into a reflective black ribbon.
For now, 100% of the electricity generated by the solar panels will go straight to the grid to power nearby households. But eventually, the team is planning to use some of that electricity to power the very trains that run above the panels. According to Danichert, 5,000 kilometers of "solar rails" (which is the current length of the entire Swiss railroad network) can generate 1 gigawatt of energy per year, or enough energy to power about 750,000 homes. Considering there are over 1 million kilometers of railway tracks worldwide, the potential could be huge, even if the system can't be installed on every one of those tracks. But most importantly, it wouldn't take up any space from farmland or forests, and it wouldn't ruin any landscapes.
Has anyone considered toilets? (Score:2, Interesting)
I understand that a lot of trains drop waste onto the tracks. How will that affect the output?
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IME diesel electric trains tend to be leaky, too, but perhaps they keep them in better condition over there or are using all electric. Solar panels between the rails seem like a really lovely upgrade to an electric rail system. And you can include equipment on the train to clean them, win win. (pressure wash, air blast?)
It's a scam for ripping off government. (Score:3)
And you can include equipment on the train to clean them, win win. (pressure wash, air blast?)
Meanwhile, putting them on a roof of a building or even on a pole next to the train tracks would eliminate those and other issues related to running hundreds of thousands of tonnes of train, cargo and passengers vibrating over SILICON CRYSTALS - at railway speeds, daily.
Bonus points for making panels harder to steal, cables and all. Which this "invention presentation" conspicuously doesn't show being installed - even in a 3D rendering, as there is no ACTUAL train doing any of this. It's a scam.
Plus, panels
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Putting the panels on poles is a problem when you have overhead electric wires. There are a lot of regulations around maximum height and distance from the high voltage cables, not least because they can come down in the event of an accident.
As for theft, it's unlikely. Copper cables for signalling are more attractive targets, as once the copper is reclaimed it can't be traced. A solar panel that obviously came from the railway is going to be difficult to sell, especially as solar panels aren't particularly
Re:It's a scam for ripping off government. (Score:4, Informative)
Here in Europe no one is so stupid to invest into something that does not work.
lol unfortunately we're just as vulnerable to grifty projects as anyone else
https://www.theguardian.com/en... [theguardian.com]
https://airqualitynews.com/hea... [airqualitynews.com]
https://road.cc/content/news/1... [road.cc]
https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]
All of these gimmicks increase costs, reduce efficiency, and complicate installation and maintenance compared to a normal commercial or residential setup. It's great that the land is already there so are parking lots, roofs, and other areas that can be used instead.
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Here in Europe no one is so stupid to invest into something that does not work.
LOL, i'm from urp and plenty stupid things are being done here. More failed 'solar road' projects than i can count on one hand.
I'm sorry, but you are the idiot. Actually, you're a double idiot for not knowing about these projects while calling others idiots. I wonder how you even managed to type words.
This train rails projects is the most idiotic, tho. The mechanical constraints will make it non-viable. Only idiots and politicians would think this is a good idea. Well, i suppose the word 'idiots' covers bot
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How can a solar roof project fail?
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you do know that the planet we're on has this thing called axial tilt and thus the Sun doesn't actually shine on the ground vertically, which is why even on flat roofs solar panels are... what was the word... tilted?
I thought that was obvious, and unnecessary to "articulate", at least here on slashdot.
What you're actually articulating, albeit unknowingly, is how little you know about the situation.
Yes, panels are tilted. But not tilting the panels will only cost you about 15% efficiency. You might say, but that's a lot! And sure, from a certain standpoint it is. But what about the standpoint of not having to build a bunch of stuff to attach the panels to? Racking and stands are about 10-25% of your total cost. If you can cut that down from 20% (a reasonable guess for a system installed along a rail line,
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Oh boy... Some fraud-loving truth-fearing snowflakes sure are busy, trying to censor reality.
Anyway, as I was saying before they tried to downmod reality to oblivion...
Racking and stands are about 10-25% of your total cost. If you can cut that down from 20% (a reasonable guess for a system installed along a rail line, without the ability to take advantage of any existing structure) to 5% then you're saving enough money to address the problem by simply installing more equipment.
First of all, if these frauds could install more, they'd install more than 60 panels for $560,000.
That's $9333.33 per panel.
They took that money and provided, well, they're still only promising to provide, 60 panels and a train car with a hole in it, instead of their magical superautomagic solar train.
Would you like to buy a bridge?
Second, yo
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As I was saying before some fucking idiot got offended by me calling a retarded moron an idiot... possibly fearing reality... AGAIN.
Elevated you can tilt them. Well, you can tilt them on the ground, too: with the risk the first train destroys them.
Well done. Proving you are an idiot.
Guess you clued onto the reasoning behind the "mysteries of my articulation" - but not enough to stop yourself spouting nonsense, then admitting it is utter fucking nonsense.
BTW, you do know that the planet we're on has this thing called axial tilt and thus the Sun doesn't actually shine on the ground vertically, which is why even on flat roo
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There is still grease from the wheel/axle lubrication. And the vibration. My GOD, the vibration. Then any loose cables that drag, etc.
This should be interesting. I can see this maybe with electric trains that use rubber wheels [wikipedia.org]?
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I'm not convinced that the vibration is that big a problem. People manage to have solar systems on RVs which get shaken to shit. In a motor home at least you're on some decent suspension and probably have a sturdy chassis, but TTs are usually flimsy AF and everything just rattles around like mad going down the road. Despite this the CCs and inverters usually have decent lifespans, and the panels are no problem at all. Yes, I get that they are on pneumatic tires, but they are generally designed by assholes a
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Maybe it's like that in your country. On modern European and Japanese railways, they are not throwing dust and dirt everywhere. Some places already put panels right next to the tracks, with the minimum separation distance limited only by the need for people to disembark the train in an emergency.
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Re:Has anyone considered toilets? (Score:4, Informative)
I understand that a lot of trains drop waste onto the tracks. How will that affect the output?
Um, this hasn't been a thing in developed countries for a long time. I'm sure it's not even a thing in much of China anymore - though I do vividly remember the literal hole in the carriage floor toilets in China about 20 years ago. To be fair, those weren't even the worst.
Re: Has anyone considered toilets? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Railway grade engineering is hardly a new thing. The tracks already have a lot of built in sensors and transponders. We can make very durable solar panels.
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https://railsystem.net/rail-wheel-lubrication/
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and *this* is what the conductor meant by "the passengers will please refrain"
I can't find it due to the hits from the song, but there was a song/rhyme/chant in which the conductors asked the passengers to refrain from dumping waste while the train was in the station.
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Most current trains in Switzerland no longer drop waste onto the tracks. However you are still right to bring up this point. The ones that did are still in service and I have ridden on them several times only a few months ago.
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Solar panel sweep on the last car.
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Have you confused Switzerland with India?
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Roof mounted panels tend to approach an equilibrium level of dirt after a while at a few percent power loss. At that point wind and rain are cleaning them as fast as dirt is landing. If they're easily accessible and/or if the owner is a clean-freak it may help enough to be worth squeeging them a couple times a year. But you're generally ahead to just install an extra panel or two to compensate and skip anything else except maybe cleaning off snowpack from a blizzard.
Being ground level, substantially hor
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The maintenance train could also stop and fix or replace broken, knocked-lose, or stolen panels.
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Switzerland uses closed toilet systems on trains.
Re: Has anyone considered toilets? (Score:2)
I thought modern trains carried sceptic tanks that are emptied when they are at the end of the line and wait there for an hour or two while as checks and routine maintenence is done.
Switzerland does not strike me as a country that is still using pre 1950s rolling stock for passenger service.
Stupid people gonna stupid. (Score:3)
Train tracks produce extreme mechanical stress, lots of dust is kicked up by a passing train and trains practically sweat oil.
This project is imagineerd by an idiot with too much money.
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Re: Stupid people gonna stupid. (Score:2)
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Re: Stupid people gonna stupid. (Score:2)
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Train tracks produce extreme mechanical stress,
Which is important if the solar panels were load bearing and holding the metal rails in place, but they aren't.
lots of dust is kicked up by a passing train and trains practically sweat oil.
This is Switzerland we're talking about. Your 100 year old American infrastructure knowledge isn't relevant. No train tracks in much of Europe are not covered in black goo, or carpeted under discolouration of dust.
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Which is important if the solar panels were load bearing and holding the metal rails in place, but they aren't.
Except that this is not necessary because of the extreme vibrations. It's a stupid system.
Your 100 year old American infrastructure knowledge isn't relevant.
I'm an european so fuck your assumptions.
No train tracks in much of Europe are not covered in black goo, or carpeted under discolouration of dust.
You should look more closely.
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It's a stupid system.
The smart part of the system is that it re-uses an existing extensive infrastructure.
Even if the panels require e.g. more regular cleaning than panels placed in more protected areas, if said infrastructure can be re-used to quickly install them it might also be used to clean them.
Even for maintenance, tracks are routinely examined by special inspection cars and undergo continuous maintenance, meaning that an infrastructure able to regularly inspect and plan for the maintenance of these panels doesn't need t
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Maintenance is going to be higher in cost than for regular panels. There are special carts that mount/unmount these panels. For maintenance the track needs to be cleared so a disruption of service and maintenance will be needed much more often than regular track maintenance because these panels are much more fragile compared to other parts of the tracks.
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All of this still doesn't mean the increased costs overcome the costs of having a "greenfield" installation of panels without the pre-existing infrastructure the railroad system provides.
I'd also assume in most cases panels would not be repaired/replaced immediately if found faulty but would be scheduled for repair/replacement during an already scheduled standard maintenance window. This is a typical maintenance strategy in arrays of devices which can keep functioning even if some devices in the array are h
Grift (Score:2)
This makes the parking lot measures look economically efficient.
Challenge is cleanliness (Score:5, Insightful)
The space between tracks is a dirty area. There's mineral oil, soot, and there's human faeces that are unloaded from older trains. They will need frequent maintenance (maybe another customized train with brushes -- and if they use soap it will pollute underground water).
Maybe Switzerland has clean trains, but one of their selling point is "there are over 1 million kilometers of railway tracks worldwide" and certainly most of these run dirty old trains.
Re:Challenge is cleanliness (Score:4, Insightful)
Old trains like this don't exist in Switzerland.
The dirt is neglectable. Train tracks do not look much more dirty than roads.
Maybe Switzerland has clean trains, but one of their selling point is "there are over 1 million kilometers of railway tracks worldwide" and certainly most of these run dirty old trains.
Yeah, but Germany, France, Spain, Italy: does not.
Re:Challenge is cleanliness (Score:4, Interesting)
I would tilt the panels slightly just to let water run off, and use a car with a tank of water with biodegradable degreaser and an equally biodegradable, non-toxic rinse aid at the back of the train to pressure wash the panels as the train passes. You could even put a sensor on the train to detect when (and which!) panels actually needed to be washed. My experience walking on the railroad tracks in Santa Cruz county (which at the time was an active SP freight line, and which is now headed towards being both that again, and a passenger rail line as well!) suggests that even pretty old and sloppy diesel-electric locomotives drop a noticeable but not outrageous amount of oil.* If you walk right behind the train you get a chance to see it before it soaks into rocks, sleepers, and even the soil; at the right solar angle (that is, walking the right direction at the right time of day) the drops are extremely visible because the sun reflects off of them.
* It's slightly outrageous if you're a hippie and you think about the rail line running alongside a critical marine sanctuary, but more modern trains drop less oil. They also want to use a fully electric (possibly hydrogen) light rail system to move people along the line.
Solar freaking railways... (Score:5, Interesting)
Granted, the area they want to cover with panels is not directly being driven on, unlike with the many failed "Solar Roadway" projects. But it is still hard to imagine that the additional dirt and wear caused by trains driving over these panels will not cause significantly faster degradation and defects, ultimately rendering this an unreasonably expensive place for PV.
Re:Solar freaking railways... (Score:4, Informative)
... I can already hear Dave Jones hyperventilate.
He actually addressed this one already a while ago:https://youtu.be/7vItnxhWRqw?t=313
It's only a little less dumb that the roadways grift.
California to Cover Its Canals With Solar Panels (Score:4, Interesting)
A pilot project in the Central Valley, the first of its kind in the country, could save water and generate energy for the state.
A new state-funded project in the San Joaquin Valley hopes to find a new way to build drought resilience. The idea is simple: Cover the state’s canals and aqueducts with solar panels to both limit evaporation and generate renewable energy [anewstate-...eaissimple].
“If you drive up and down the state, you see a lot of open canals. And after year after year of drought it seemed an obvious question: How much are we losing to evaporation?” said Jordan Harris, co-founder and chief executive of Solar AquaGrid, a company based in the Bay Area that’s designing and overseeing the initiative. “It’s just common sense in our eyes.”
The California Department of Water Resources is providing $20 million to test the concept in Stanislaus County and to help determine where else along the state’s 4,000 miles of canals — one of the largest water conveyance systems in the world — it would make the most sense to install solar panels. The project is a collaboration between the state, Solar AquaGrid, the Turlock Irrigation District and researchers with the University of California, Merced, who will track and analyze the findings.
Placing panels that point to the sun (Score:2)
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My bet is there is a big subsidy or govt/taxpayer grant behind this hair brained project.
The project is "subsidized" by its nature of leveraging an already existing extensive infrastructure. The railroad infrastructure exists already and has been build investing billions and is being continuously maintained, with or without the addition of these solar panels.
Of course panels would be more efficient and require less maintenance if built in a different location, but the reduced efficiency and increased maintenance won't necessarily surpass the savings of re-using the existing infrastructure.
Solar Agriculture (Score:5, Informative)
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What happens when it's time to plough, disc or plant?
Self-driving tractors use vision systems to avoid the poles. This is already-deployed technology.
And that's totally ignoring collision issues and weed/pest treatment concerns.
Pests don't hang out on solar panels. Spiders do. Roundup won't hurt the poles the arrays are mounted to.
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TFA mentioned one thing that seems a better idea
It's actually a great idea. The problem is that some countries have complete idiots in government, e.g. the UK where the prime minister of 40 days managed to pass rules that effectively ban putting solar panels on farm land.
The Queen of idiots (Score:2)
The one who was told several times a week that her unfunded tax cuts would cause a run on the bond market. The one who insisted for the 30th or so time that this wasn't true.
The one who caused a run on the bond market within hours of attempting this.
And the one who should have literally died from shame but has tried a couple of times to make a comeback.
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This apparently has the additional benefit that many crops appreciate the shade, grow better, and need less irrigation.
Most of the vegetables and fruit we consume prefer full sun all day, at least if they're growing in anything approaching their native habitat. The idea of growing in "shade frames" comes from gardeners who are trying to grow cooler-climate crops in hot areas (e.g. lettuce in Arizona). The plants don't actually prefer shade.
It certainly could be applicable in places like California and Florida (which do have huge areas devoted to agriculture), but only when they're growing certain crops. It might actually be
Solar Orientation Issues (Score:2)
This is a neat idea - certainly better than the solar roadways thing, but it does have some issues. A lot of the track would not be economical to put solar panels on as it would be shaded by buildings, trees, hillsides, tunnels etc. However the biggest problem with this is that the panels cannot be tilted towards the sun. This means that you immediately lose efficiency on every panel because of Switzerland's latitude away from the equator.
So what you're gaining really is spare land and a pre-existing electr
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However the biggest problem with this is that the panels cannot be tilted towards the sun. This means that you immediately lose efficiency on every panel because of Switzerland's latitude away from the equator.
That is nonsense. They can be tilted. It is just a question if the extra effort is worth it. On top of that: the "optimal" tilt for fixed installations is something like 32degrees. That is not very much.
The distance between tracks is roughly 1400mm (roughly 4feet 8inch),
Supposed the track goes from ea
Racks beside the tracks instead (Score:2)
Great! For a moment I thought the
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Oh, as soon as a European country/company has a solar project, only Nay Saysrs pop on /.
Trains never derail in the rain do they?
Extremely rarely.
When that results in derailments, I'm sure there is no way whatsoever that 50+ ton railcars could do any damage to the wiring that'd break the jacketing and short a wire to the rail or a car, right?
Yes it could. Just like with the over track power line. That is why you are supposed to stay in the train after an accident and only go out under extreme circumstance
Re: Racks beside the tracks instead (Score:2)
Agreed. There are actually a lot of areas like this (at least in the US), not just sidetrack. For example, right-of-ways along high tension power lines are largely unused and many times wider than needed to get a vehicle through. Same with oil and gas pipelines. These could pretty readily be adapted for solar.
eevblog dave has a video about this (Score:3)
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You think vandalism and theft are going to be an issue in Switzerland but not that solar panels and electronics are rather delicate and require good positioning, lack of shade, and cooling for optimal efficiency?
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Solar panels are not near as delicate as most people believe. Most are tested to withstand 1" hailstones. I would worry about the microinverters I presume they'll be using, though.
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I still remember being in a huge hail storm in the tropics in Australia. We got big ones. Golf ball sized, tennis ball sized. My girlfriend's car was written off twice, our roof replaced once. I remember just after our neighbours got solar panels (our house was higher so our window was about in line with their gutters) and I was watching with anticipation as their panels would break during a particularly bad storm.
Well a big hail stone came down and smacked their panel HARD. It was fine though. Unfortunatel
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This isn’t the USA.
A gigawatt is a unit of power, not energy (Score:5, Informative)
A gigawatt of energy per year is a non-functional statement. Why do so many of these tech sites keep getting this so wrong?
Maybe they meant gigawatt-hour per year? That would be a unit of energy but not very impressive.
Maybe they meant peak power capacity is a gigawatt. That sounds more suitable but that's an instantaneous unit and has nothing to do with a year since obviously solar can not generate at peak wattage for a whole year non-stop.
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A gigawatt of energy per year is a non-functional statement. Why do so many of these tech sites keep getting this so wrong?
Presumably modern tech sites are not written for techies but in fact for the common idiot who doesn't understand the distinction between power and energy in the first place.
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Time (Score:2)
>"can generate 1 gigawatt of energy per year"
Not this again. A watt is a measurement of power with no element of time. Such a statement means little, it only says the peak capacity, not what will actually be produced. A gigawatt for HOW LONG? A second? A minute? An hour? A day? Is that 1 gigawatt [presumably capacity] during peak sun? An average? Does it account for night? For weather? They don't say, so it is meaningless.
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Well, by 1 gigawatt per year don't they mean 1 gigawatt over 8,760 hours per year = 114,155 watts per hour? Or am I doing that wrong?
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>"Well, by 1 gigawatt per year don't they mean 1 gigawatt over 8,760 hours per year = 114,155 watts per hour? Or am I doing that wrong?"
That's my point. Who knows what they mean? If they do mean what you just said, that is not much power.
Why not sidetrack? (Score:2)
Most tracks in the US have a good bit of space to the sides, frequently gravel covered but not always. This is largely unused except for occasional maintenance vehicles so why not install panels there instead (or in addition)? Seems like they'd be easier to clean and maintain.
reflective? (Score:2)
turning the gap between train tracks into a reflective black ribbon.
Are they considering crew visibility during low sun situations?
Just two questtions (Score:2)
1) How do they deal with the stresses caused by the changing air pressure and vibration from the passing trains? The sudden burst of wind of a passing train is likely to rip a solar panel off its mounts or cause the panel to continually flex and vibrate with each passing train. The solar panels will need to be physically stronger than your average panel.
2) How do they deal with snow build up on the panels? Are they relying on #1 above to clear the snow?
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The solar panels will need to be physically stronger than your average panel.
Do they? How strong is an actual panel and what will be needed in this case? Please use actual engineering units when giving your answer.
A lot of people here seem to think that solar panels are made of paper, and you appear to be one of them.
Poop (Score:2)
I've ridden a lot of Swiss trains. They are wonderful.
However, some of the older cars have toilets which dump directly onto the tracks. I don't know if all of these have been replaced but it might be an issue.
Anything is possible (Score:2)
Anything is possible with enough government subsidies.
time and time again (Score:3)
Swiss Investments Paying Off (Score:2)
So they have found some investments to pour all that Nazi gold into. I guess all the Russian money is helping, too.
They won't make money from reselling Swiss licensed tanks to Ukraine in order for them to defend themselves. So fuck Ukraine, right Switzerland!? It would probably piss off the source of Russian money too much. Switzerland needs to become a pariah state.
This is more sane (Score:2)
Than past proposals of turning roads into giant solar panels. Those would've been destroyed in a month.
There is minimal chance of this doing the same with railroad tracks. The only issue here is cost vs benefit.
read that again: CONCEPT (Score:2)
When you read all the comments about dirt and vibrations, you'd think "how dumb must these swiss guys be to not think of that?" immediately followed buy: "of course they thought of that" - and they did. They believe they've solved these issues and that's exactly what concept deployments like this are for: Put it out in the real world and see if it works.
Let them do it. Let them figure out if they thought of everything and if their solutions work. It could be a cool thing, and testing it is exactly what's ne
Railroad ties? (Score:2)
In general, wooden ties may need to be replaced every 7 to 10 years, while concrete ties can last for up to 30 years.
I hope they can pick up their panels before the ties are changed, and, I hope they have an agreement with the union that changes ties regarding damage to solar panel related infrastructure. It might be a good idea to install the panels just after the installation of concrete ties, since they theoretically have similar life expectancies.
Re:Here we go... (Score:4, Interesting)
You are the one bringing up nuclear, maybe you should work on your insecurity.
That said, there is one benefit to putting solar panels between the rail tracks: it doesn't take more land space than what is already used for the trains.
There are some disadvantages though: harder to plan for maintenance (I guess they will need to work at night), risk of delaying the trains when there is an accident (thus making people even more wary of public transportation).
Assuming 400w solar panels, the pilot project would make the MW at $23,000.
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They're supposed to be installing the panels in groups of three, perhaps those three panels are all connected to the same microinverter. Presumably X number of groups of three will be connected to the transmission lines. They will be able to come in and remove them by hand easily enough and it won't take so long to remove a group of three panels that they won't be able to plan to do it between trains. Solar is easy to handle, once you design the system it tends to just plug together. Making a good charge co
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They will be able to come in and remove them by hand easily enough and it won't take so long to remove a group of three panels
Except there are usually trains running on those railways, so even if it is easy to remove/replace them, you would have to stop trafic and add more regulations for those use cases. On trains that are already running late. Or, as I said, do the maintenance at night.
Also, you might end up needing to cover a lot of ground (either by road, or a special train) if a group of solar panels just break or need maintenance in the middle of nowhere.
There is also the problem of that the space between tracks is quote dir
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Also, you might end up needing to cover a lot of ground (either by road, or a special train) if a group of solar panels just break or need maintenance in the middle of nowhere.
So a group of panels fail. Your system efficiency drops by 0.01%. The end of the world is nigh.
There is also the problem of that the space between tracks is quote dirty: oil, grease, minerals, human shit (which is why you usually have a sign saying not to use the toilets when in the rail station).
It's not 1889. Trains in Switzerland use airline-style toilets that store waste.
Re: Here we go... (Score:2)
And cleaning these should be a cinch. A train car that's just a tanker filled with water and a spray rig. Run it down the rails with the sprayer on and wash the panels.
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There are some disadvantages though:
Among them: That they'd be a target for theft. If it gets too bad it could impact both the operation and payback of the project.
(Any homeless encampments, though, might end up with better electrification.)
A good countermeasure might be stamping into the panels' structure a serial number and notice that they're property of the railroad, with the serial numbers and installation locations recorded into a database automatically by the installing machinery {updated if they'r
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thus making people even more wary of public transportation).
Not sure who or where people are "wary" of public transportation, but in Switzerland public transportation is generally considered very efficient and reliable.
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Sorry, I guess i should have explained further my train of thought.
One of the problem we have with cars right now, be it EV or ICE, is that most commute travels consist of 1 person alone sitting in a 2 tons car. There are multiple ways to solve that:
- replace some usages with bikes (I have friends in Switzerland, and the number of people taking their car for sub-3kms rides is quite high)
- use carpooling, so even though there are still cars on the road, there are fewer of them (by going from 1 to 4 occupants
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1) Lack of security, safety.
2) Dirtiness, lack of proper cleaning.
3) Lack of linked transport options: difficulty in getting to point B from point A.
4) Slowness- if public transport is X2 what it takes to use a vehicle.
If you solved these four issues, I'd gladly swap to public transport.
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Better still - they know how rail systems work. Unrolling = installing, and you don't want to be doing that in the middle of daytime rail traffic. Not if you want to keep your legs.
Re: (Score:2)
Whatever the solution is, this sure as hell ain't it.
It's an unnecessarily complicated and will be exposing the panels and electronics to a lot of stress and dirt for no reason.
https://youtu.be/7vItnxhWRqw?t... [youtu.be]
Re: Here we go... (Score:2)
This can at least help power the various switching/signaling/detection equipment and serve as a backup should the nukes or grid go offline. And they can feed any excess power to the grid.
Re: (Score:2)
Seems silly to bring that up when it doesn't apply here...
Re: Small, modular, nuclear train? (Score:2)
Put the panels above the overhead lines, not on the ground between the tracks where they'll get dirty and damaged.
Re: (Score:3)
That would require switching off the power, and stoping train traffic during construction.
This system is explicitly design to exactly do not have this drawback.
Re: (Score:2)
I just see that it's still worth it. Maintenance would be a lot lower and reliability a lot higher.
Re: (Score:2)