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Posted
On 9/20/2024 at 6:48 PM, RSF said:

All that proves is that you post a lot of crazy shit. 

lol, nope.  It proves I have a biggest fan.  

Posted
On 9/21/2024 at 12:44 PM, Orange said:

You, twat. 

So predictable.

to be fair, I’m a fan of anybody that posts crazy, stupid shit. Or acts like it. Those people are the most fun to mess with.  So your sheer volume just requires that you be near the top of the list. So please, keep up the good work. 

Posted

I ran across this article stating that researchers believe they have discovered why older batteries don't hold a charge as long as newer batteries. Also, the positive impact it could have on EV batteries.

 

Previously, scientists thought batteries self-discharge because not all lithium ions return to the anode when charging, reducing the number of charged ions available to form the current and provide power.

Using the Advanced Photon Source, a powerful X-ray machine, at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, the research team discovered that hydrogen molecules from the battery's electrolyte would move to the cathode and take the spots that lithium ions normally bind to. As a result, lithium ions have fewer places to bind to on the cathode, weakening the electric current and decreasing the battery's capacity.

 

https://techxplore.com/news/2024-09-discovery-longer-ev-batteries-hasten.html

 

  • Like 1
Posted

JFC! What dipshits.

https://heatmap.news/plus/the-fight/spotlight/renewable-energy-ban-oklahoma

Quote

 

The Growing Push to Ban Renewable Energy in Oklahoma

here’s a nascent, concerted effort to make Oklahoma the first state to ban new renewable energy projects. And it’s picking up steam.

Across the U.S., activism against wind and solar energy has only grown in intensity, power, and scope in tandem with the recent renewables boom. This is in direct contrast to hopes many in the climate movement had that these technologies would become more popular as they entered communities historically hostile to the idea of switching away from fossil fuels. If anything, grassroots angst toward the energy transition has only surged in many pockets of the country since passage of the nation’s first climate law – Inflation Reduction Act – in 2022.

 

 

Posted

Governor's against it, but if the Okies insist, such projects are more than welcome in West Texas.

 

 

All kinda funny considering the driver of renewable energy in this part of the world was oilman/Okie T Boone Pickens (RIP)...

  • Like 1
Posted
On 1/12/2025 at 6:48 PM, Spaztecs said:

Much of the resistance is being driven by planning and finding from the top down.

One would think people would want clean energy generated within their communities and not energy generated 1000's of miles away by a group of people who don't care about their local needs and challenges.

Oil industry is a huge employer in Oklahoma. That’s why this is an issue there. 

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