More Global Cooling/Warming/Change hoax.

Ron Scarboro

GT40s Supporter
Supporter
I really hope to see this car in the flesh some day.
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And so please post your scientific qualifications. You have a PHD in what? And a masters in? Oh, yeah, reposting.
Hilarious. Libs have gone from "give us a link to your claim", to "you're not qualified for anything but reposting". Well, its obvious liberals are intolerant of anything that doesn't fit into what they are told by their leaders. Where would you be without your leaders?
 
And so please post your scientific qualifications. You have a PHD in what? And a masters in? Oh, yeah, reposting.
Use Your Real Name: If you have signed up with some sort of “handle” go to your User Control Panel (User CP link in the menu bar) and change your Public Name under “Edit Your Details” to your real name. GT40s.com does not support user handles, you need to use the name your mother gave you, not a nickname. We don't care how long you've been using your nickname. Only one registration per real person, we use login IP addresses and other means to determine "multiple personalities". We wish to know who we’re talking to and who is accountable for their posts on the forum. GT40s.com reserves the right to ban users at any time, for any reason. Hint, the answer to the registration question is Real Name
 

Ron Scarboro

GT40s Supporter
Supporter
Use Your Real Name: If you have signed up with some sort of “handle” go to your User Control Panel (User CP link in the menu bar) and change your Public Name under “Edit Your Details” to your real name. GT40s.com does not support user handles, you need to use the name your mother gave you, not a nickname. We don't care how long you've been using your nickname. Only one registration per real person, we use login IP addresses and other means to determine "multiple personalities". We wish to know who we’re talking to and who is accountable for their posts on the forum. GT40s.com reserves the right to ban users at any time, for any reason. Hint, the answer to the registration question is Real Name

How much have you contributed to the operations of this forum Bob?

Oh, and Rick’s “Real Name” is in his handle. You really are that dim aren’t you.
 

Ron Scarboro

GT40s Supporter
Supporter
I was told it was an identifier for the pit crew during night portions of races. Each gulf car had a different color.
 
“As Bill Gates has put it, the challenge calls for scientific ‘miracles.’ Any hoped-for technological breakthroughs won’t emerge from subsidizing yesterday’s technologies, including wind and solar. The Internet didn’t emerge from subsidizing the dial-up phone, or the transistor from subsidizing vacuum tubes, or the automobile from subsidizing railroads. If policymakers were serious about the pursuit of the next energy revolution, they’d be talking a lot more about reinvigorating support for basic science.”
https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2019/05/transformative-technology-needed.php
 

Terry Oxandale

Skinny Man
Ron,

If you'll allow me a post before returning this string to an enjoyable one again:

I would think I'd get tired of reading link after link, that tells half the story, simply because a sliver of it is justified by personal beliefs.

Wind is just a stepping stone, whose subsidization (tax credits) paved the way toward other steps in tying it all together (wind and solar linked to stored energy devices). It is like the '80s fuel injection systems for cars, which was very crude and basic. Yet today, fuel injection is a mastered art that breathed new life into the internal combustion engine for better tailpipe emissions. Wind is doing the same, and bringing along companion technologies that will allow a complete system to work efficiently.

These companion devices (stored energy and solar) are also receiving tax incentives to help get them propped up, all of which will be transformative for our energy supply industry. I am a big proponent of nuclear, but a large percentage of our population is not, and that spans all demographics. The idea that battery technology is "fanciful" is either misinformation, or ignorance of what is really taking place in this technology. I deal almost daily (recently), with the potential of this storage in our industry, and it is 10 fold more promising at this early stage of development, than wind was in its infancy.

"Smart technologies and AI" are not placing a burden on the grid that renewables cannot handle. In fact just the opposite is true. Smart technologies (and AI when it is developed) are allowing the complexities of energy storage resources to better integrate with renewables and thermal resources, to make them even more manageable.

Please take time to do more than just find a post and throw it out there. Please investigate battery costs versus time, and expected future costs. Investigate the recycling of L-ion batteries and the plan for car battery recycling. Investigate how stored and renewable resources pair up. Please investigate the near-future projects in the queue for these and other stored energy resources. Please investigate the net impact wind has had on energy prices in those fortunate areas that have lots of wind. 10 years ago the "experts" said 20% injection was a limit, yet today we are routinely running double that, and over 60% on peak wind days. Yes, nuclear would be great to put side-by-side with renewable resources, but unless you've been in a cave the last 10 years, you would know why that may never happen.
 

Rick Muck- Mark IV

GT40s Sponsor
Supporter
Ron,

If you'll allow me a post before returning this string to an enjoyable one again:

I would think I'd get tired of reading link after link, that tells half the story, simply because a sliver of it is justified by personal beliefs.

Wind is just a stepping stone, whose subsidization (tax credits) paved the way toward other steps in tying it all together (wind and solar linked to stored energy devices). It is like the '80s fuel injection systems for cars, which was very crude and basic. Yet today, fuel injection is a mastered art that breathed new life into the internal combustion engine for better tailpipe emissions. Wind is doing the same, and bringing along companion technologies that will allow a complete system to work efficiently.

These companion devices (stored energy and solar) are also receiving tax incentives to help get them propped up, all of which will be transformative for our energy supply industry. I am a big proponent of nuclear, but a large percentage of our population is not, and that spans all demographics. The idea that battery technology is "fanciful" is either misinformation, or ignorance of what is really taking place in this technology. I deal almost daily (recently), with the potential of this storage in our industry, and it is 10 fold more promising at this early stage of development, than wind was in its infancy.

"Smart technologies and AI" are not placing a burden on the grid that renewables cannot handle. In fact just the opposite is true. Smart technologies (and AI when it is developed) are allowing the complexities of energy storage resources to better integrate with renewables and thermal resources, to make them even more manageable.

Please take time to do more than just find a post and throw it out there. Please investigate battery costs versus time, and expected future costs. Investigate the recycling of L-ion batteries and the plan for car battery recycling. Investigate how stored and renewable resources pair up. Please investigate the near-future projects in the queue for these and other stored energy resources. Please investigate the net impact wind has had on energy prices in those fortunate areas that have lots of wind. 10 years ago the "experts" said 20% injection was a limit, yet today we are routinely running double that, and over 60% on peak wind days. Yes, nuclear would be great to put side-by-side with renewable resources, but unless you've been in a cave the last 10 years, you would know why that may never happen.
Oh, you are asking for "Bob"to actually read and understand the stuff he posts! Not gonna happen....................
 
“In the end, the message is that if the U.S. were to target using 100 percent renewable electricity, it would need significant amounts of battery or other storage capacity and more comprehensive, flexible transmission lines, as well as more renewable generation capacity. And all that is without charging very many electric cars. With more electric cars, the grid would need significantly more power and storage.”

https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1121465_polar-vortex-tests-viability-of-renewable-power
 


A new NASA study says that Antarctica is overall accumulating ice. Still, areas of the continent, like the Antarctic Peninsula photographed above, have increased their mass loss in the last decades.
Credits: NASA's Operation IceBridge

Map showing the rates of mass changes from ICESat 2003-2008 over Antarctica. Sums are for all of Antarctica: East Antarctica (EA, 2-17); interior West Antarctica (WA2, 1, 18, 19, and 23); coastal West Antarctica (WA1, 20-21); and the Antarctic Peninsula (24-27). A gigaton (Gt) corresponds to a billion metric tons, or 1.1 billion U.S. tons.
Credits: Jay Zwally/ Journal of Glaciology
A new NASA study says that an increase in Antarctic snow accumulation that began 10,000 years ago is currently adding enough ice to the continent to outweigh the increased losses from its thinning glaciers.



The research challenges the conclusions of other studies, including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) 2013 report, which says that Antarctica is overall losing land ice.

https://www.gt40s.com/threads/more-global-cooling-warming-change-hoax.36040/page-118
 
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