The tradeoff is the convenience of storage, transport and use of the fuel. If the synthesizing process (Sabatier, pyrolisis, or Fischer Tropf, etc) is closed loop then it's point of use efficiency is less relevant in terms of total systems costs and value of the end product.wesley123 wrote: ↑23 Apr 2022, 15:08Looked it up, and it indeed is a significant amount. Current higher spec panels have around a 20% efficiency rating.
However, what imo the difference is is that, whereas there is a lot of energy wasted in a solar panel, there isn't any energy or resources spent to produce this loss.
In the case of synthetic fuels you spend energy, resources and labor to then use ~50% of it.
f.e. to speak of two dimensions only, a tank of fuel would have a miniscule floor plan compared to an equivalent solar array.
This is one of the main points of the post. Non-scientific claims were made to form certain policy decisions; the same game will be played to support the policy decisions that supplant them.Andres125sx wrote: ↑23 Apr 2022, 12:33First, overstated looks like a political and populist statement
Never understood why the analogue broadcast signal was abandoned; the digital version always struggled with distance and weather by comparison. If one's concerned about TV fidelity or extra features surely they'd be using land lines to the house or internet TV. I'd say lobbying but surely the digital converter box market couldn't have been that huge.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑23 Apr 2022, 16:09now the sun is out so there's no reception (digital radio or digital TV) for the Imola thing
60 years ago they sent this stuff down the landlines to a UK transmitter that actually worked
... I shall take a bath