One Battery Does Not Fit All

On Thu, 11 Sep 2008 20:05:19 -0700 (PDT), Bret Cahill
<BretCahill@aol.com> wrote:

You know the purpose of the OP?

Rephrase grammatically.

Reread the OP then tell everyone you think law and politics are
irrelevant to government funding of basic research.
---
Why bother?

The OP is nothing more than an ignorant, opinionated blowhard.

JF
 
On Thu, 11 Sep 2008 20:09:27 -0700 (PDT), Bret Cahill
<BretCahill@aol.com> wrote:

6. Li Nice high storage density battery. Wonderful performance that
you'd love to see in ALL your battery-operated devices!  One little
catch. In 2-3 years capacity is half and in 5 years the thing needs
replaced and they are NOT cheap!  (replaced your laptop battery
lately? Probably needs it. Only couple of hundred bucks. Oh yeah, you
can buy a whole new laptop for almost the price of just the battery.)

7. That "new" technology we are all waiting for. #6 but lasts 50
years. Hell, we'd settle for 20 years!  Um, guess what? Nobody's
invented it yet.  Maybe if we all start bouncing basketballs that new
battery will be invented. Better to do SOMETHING than to do NOTHING!
Cast that wide net!

It is already there - Li-ion battery with LiFePO4 cathode. It runs at
lower
voltage therefore losing about half of energy density (still about
twice
better than NiMH), but for that cycle life is phenomenal.
Btw, potentially cheap - look at the composition. Basically a
fertilizer (right
now pricey because of nano-technology used to manufacture).
Also safe - does not blow up, thermal run-away 300C higher than normal
LiCoO2
based Li-ion

This is the tech everyone in US considers for EVs and plug in hybrids.

Well, Japanese still bet on LiCo0.3Ni0.3Mn0.3O2, because it does not
sacrifice energy density. And they bet that long cycleability is more
a
packaging issue than material issue (use pressurized stacks, use more
electrolyte etc), well, maybe they will have to downgrade the voltage
somewhat to improve cycles.

We shell see who will turn out to be right. The tech is there, it is
the manufacturing
capacity that is a problem right now. If NiMH based hybrids supply is
contained by
batteries manufacturing.

What is needed from government right now is not a 100mln price for
best new invention, but 50bln$ investment or loan for manufacturing
infrastructure... (btw already promiced by congress but never
delivered). That is what China is doing, they allocated entire city of
Tianjin for EV industry development...

The $300 million McCain is offering is a joke.
---
_You're_ the joke, cahill, pretending you know anything about R&D when
all you are is a poor dumb bastard intent on trying to convince anyone
who will listen that you're not.
---

First it doesn't even come close to covering R & D costs. Second, the
patent would be worth several orders of magnitude more.
---
How would _you_ know anything about that?
---

Only Branson had a dumber offer -- $25,000,000
---
Of course, since there's no chance in hell that you'd be able to win
either prize, all you can do is condemn both of them.

Hey, it's been a nice couple of days around here with you not posting
your goddam bullshit, so why don't you try making it better by shutting
the fuck up forever, OK?

JF
 
On Sep 11, 11:19 pm, "zzbun...@netscape.net" <zzbun...@netscape.net>
wrote:
On Sep 11, 11:03 pm, Bret Cahill <BretCah...@aol.com> wrote:

You haven't done much in law or politics, have you?
Irrelevant.

What is irrelevant?

Battery innovation?

Gummint funding for fundamental research?

McCain offered a $300,000,000 award to anyone who develops a "super
battery."  We don't have any numbers that would define "super."

   But. since McCain is a professional navy crank, that's why he's
been
   advised to ask the GUBMENT. Since the only thing navy cranks
   even know about batteries is LAMPS HELOS,

   So, the people who actually understand ENIGINEERING ae just
   conitinueng to develop GPS, FIBER OPTICS, RISC, OPTICAL COMPUTERS,
PV CELLS,
   Adaptive A.I., CD, DVD+RW, EBOOKS, POST MCDONALD's HOLOGRAMS, WWW,
   DRONES, AUVs, AAVs,  Cruise Missiles, Laser-guided Bombs,
   and POST NEANDERTHAL ROBOTICS, neo Wind Energy, and biodiesel
   rather than worrry about how navy idiots  waste our battery money.
Or better to say as:
Ships were made for sailors, not morons in the navy,
Engines were made for people who understand, not imbelices in the
navy.
And erngineering was made for people who understand robo-lasers,
not navy computer science idiots.






What we really need is 3 awards for three different categories:

1.  Low cost/cycles w/ high energy and power density @ possibly low
efficiency.

2.  High efficiency withy high energy and power density @ possibly
high cost.

3.  Low cost/cycles w/ possibly low efficiency and low power density.

Here, try reading the OP again:

Some start ups are making claims that their battery is superior in
every aspect, i. e., cost, energy density, efficiency, etc., to every
other battery.  From pacemakers to load leveling power plants their
technology will not only dominate the market but effectively
eliminate
all other technology.

We can always be hopeful but these claims might not pan out, and,
like
heat engines, a variety of situations will result in a variety of
solutions.

For example, the cost of power from a grid + battery situation like
EVs or "off the grid" or off peak solar/wind homes is 2/3rds battery
using the life time cycling cost of a battery.  Trying to cut that
cost by increasing the efficiency by 10% while allowing the cost of
the battery to rise 20% won't be nearly as effective as cutting the
cost of the battery by half and taking a 20% hit in efficiency.  Grid
+ battery situations could still be cost effective with an
inefficient
battery if it was cheap enough as far as the lifetime number of
cycles.

In contrast, the cost of ICE + battery ( hybrids run entirely on fuel
is much less than 2/5ths battery and the situation is reversed.
Trying to cut that cost by cutting battery cost isn't going to be
nearly as effective as increasing efficiency.

In an ICE + battery situation true economy requires spending a lot of
money for a somewhat more efficient battery.

Another example is EVs require high energy density batteries.  For an
off grid or off peak home neither energy nor power density are
significant factors.  A battery wouldn't fill an apt. closet.

Therefor it would be cost effective to consider lower energy density
as well as lower efficiency in order to get a cheap battery/cycling
ratio.

The point is to cast as big a net as possible to get as many
different
batteries as possible.

Anyway you dodged the question:

You haven't done much in law or politics, have you?

Bret Cahill- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -
 
Bret Cahill wrote:

You haven't done much in law or politics, have you?

Irrelevant.

What is irrelevant?

Battery innovation?

Gummint funding for fundamental research?

McCain offered a $300,000,000 award to anyone who develops a "super
battery." We don't have any numbers that would define "super."
That's politics. Just meaningless drivel for half of America -- those with
below-average intelligence.
What we really need is 3 awards for three different categories:

1. Low cost/cycles w/ high energy and power density @ possibly low
efficiency.

2. High efficiency withy high energy and power density @ possibly
high cost.

3. Low cost/cycles w/ possibly low efficiency and low power density.

Here, try reading the OP again:

Some start ups are making claims that their battery is superior in
every aspect, i. e., cost, energy density, efficiency, etc., to every
other battery. From pacemakers to load leveling power plants their
technology will not only dominate the market but effectively
eliminate
all other technology.

We can always be hopeful but these claims might not pan out, and,
like
heat engines, a variety of situations will result in a variety of
solutions.

For example, the cost of power from a grid + battery situation like
EVs or "off the grid" or off peak solar/wind homes is 2/3rds battery
using the life time cycling cost of a battery. Trying to cut that
cost by increasing the efficiency by 10% while allowing the cost of
the battery to rise 20% won't be nearly as effective as cutting the
cost of the battery by half and taking a 20% hit in efficiency. Grid
+ battery situations could still be cost effective with an
inefficient
battery if it was cheap enough as far as the lifetime number of
cycles.

In contrast, the cost of ICE + battery ( hybrids run entirely on fuel
is much less than 2/5ths battery and the situation is reversed.
Trying to cut that cost by cutting battery cost isn't going to be
nearly as effective as increasing efficiency.

In an ICE + battery situation true economy requires spending a lot of
money for a somewhat more efficient battery.

Another example is EVs require high energy density batteries. For an
off grid or off peak home neither energy nor power density are
significant factors. A battery wouldn't fill an apt. closet.

Therefor it would be cost effective to consider lower energy density
as well as lower efficiency in order to get a cheap battery/cycling
ratio.

The point is to cast as big a net as possible to get as many
different
batteries as possible.

Anyway you dodged the question:

You haven't done much in law or politics, have you?


Bret Cahill
 
On Sep 11, 10:09 pm, Bret Cahill <BretCah...@aol.com> wrote:
6. Li Nice high storage density battery. Wonderful performance that
you'd love to see in ALL your battery-operated devices!  One little
catch. In 2-3 years capacity is half and in 5 years the thing needs
replaced and they are NOT cheap!  (replaced your laptop battery
lately? Probably needs it. Only couple of hundred bucks. Oh yeah, you
can buy a whole new laptop for almost the price of just the battery.)

7. That "new" technology we are all waiting for. #6 but lasts 50
years. Hell, we'd settle for 20 years!  Um, guess what? Nobody's
invented it yet.  Maybe if we all start bouncing basketballs that new
battery will be invented. Better to do SOMETHING than to do NOTHING!
Cast that wide net!

It is already there - Li-ion battery with LiFePO4 cathode. It runs at
lower
voltage therefore losing about half of energy density (still about
twice
better than NiMH), but for that cycle life is phenomenal.
Btw, potentially cheap - look at the composition. Basically a
fertilizer (right
now pricey because of nano-technology used to manufacture).
Also safe - does not blow up, thermal run-away 300C higher than normal
LiCoO2
based Li-ion

This is the tech everyone in US considers for EVs and plug in hybrids.

Well, Japanese still bet on LiCo0.3Ni0.3Mn0.3O2, because it does not
sacrifice energy density. And they bet that long cycleability is more
a
packaging issue than material issue (use pressurized stacks, use more
electrolyte etc), well, maybe they will have to downgrade the voltage
somewhat to improve cycles.

We shell see who will turn out to be right. The tech is there, it is
the manufacturing
capacity that is a problem right now. If NiMH based hybrids supply is
contained by
batteries manufacturing.

What is needed from government right now is not a 100mln price for
best new invention, but 50bln$ investment or loan for manufacturing
infrastructure... (btw already promiced by congress but never
delivered). That is what China is doing, they allocated entire city of
Tianjin for EV industry development...

The $300 million McCain is offering is a joke.

First it doesn't even come close to covering R & D costs.  Second, the
patent would be worth several orders of magnitude more.

Only Branson had a dumber offer -- $25,000,000

Bret Cahill
This is more close to what I am talking about:
http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200809121439DOWJONESDJONLINE000742_FORTUNE5.htm

25 billion is something that is going to make an impact.
However, even 25% efficiency improvement is not high enough barrier to
exclude other "non-electric" technologies.
But then, why would we want to exclude them? After all,
combination
of direct injection, turbocharging, aerodynamics and weight are all
steps in right direction. The last two will definitely benefit (or
maybe
even make economical) battery-only cars, because inherently more
efficient car will also
require smaller/cheaper battery.

Regards,
Yevgen
 
On Sat, 13 Sep 2008 13:45:58 -0700 (PDT), Bret Cahill
<BretCahill@aol.com> wrote:

Hey, it's been a nice couple of days around here with you not posting

I'll be back.
---
Into each life some rain must fall.


JF
 
6. Li Nice high storage density battery. Wonderful performance that
you'd love to see in ALL your battery-operated devices!  One little
catch. In 2-3 years capacity is half and in 5 years the thing needs
replaced and they are NOT cheap!  (replaced your laptop battery
lately? Probably needs it. Only couple of hundred bucks. Oh yeah, you
can buy a whole new laptop for almost the price of just the battery..)

7. That "new" technology we are all waiting for. #6 but lasts 50
years. Hell, we'd settle for 20 years!  Um, guess what? Nobody's
invented it yet.  Maybe if we all start bouncing basketballs that new
battery will be invented. Better to do SOMETHING than to do NOTHING!
Cast that wide net!

It is already there - Li-ion battery with LiFePO4 cathode. It runs at
lower
voltage therefore losing about half of energy density (still about
twice
better than NiMH), but for that cycle life is phenomenal.
Btw, potentially cheap - look at the composition. Basically a
fertilizer (right
now pricey because of nano-technology used to manufacture).
Also safe - does not blow up, thermal run-away 300C higher than normal
LiCoO2
based Li-ion

This is the tech everyone in US considers for EVs and plug in hybrids..

Well, Japanese still bet on LiCo0.3Ni0.3Mn0.3O2, because it does not
sacrifice energy density. And they bet that long cycleability is more
a
packaging issue than material issue (use pressurized stacks, use more
electrolyte etc), well, maybe they will have to downgrade the voltage
somewhat to improve cycles.

We shell see who will turn out to be right. The tech is there, it is
the manufacturing
capacity that is a problem right now. If NiMH based hybrids supply is
contained by
batteries manufacturing.

What is needed from government right now is not a 100mln price for
best new invention, but 50bln$ investment or loan for manufacturing
infrastructure... (btw already promiced by congress but never
delivered). That is what China is doing, they allocated entire city of
Tianjin for EV industry development...

The $300 million McCain is offering is a joke.

First it doesn't even come close to covering R & D costs.  Second, the
patent would be worth several orders of magnitude more.

Only Branson had a dumber offer -- $25,000,000

Bret Cahill

This is more close to what I am talking about:http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200809121439DOWJO...

25 billion is something that is going to make an impact.
However, even 25% efficiency improvement is not high enough barrier to
exclude other "non-electric" technologies.
Extraction and burning of carbon fuels is increasingly only for the
rich, i. e., Al Gore.

    But then, why would we want to exclude them? After all,
combination
of direct injection, turbocharging, aerodynamics and weight are all
steps in right direction. The last two will definitely benefit (or
maybe
even make economical) battery-only cars, because inherently more
efficient car will also
require smaller/cheaper battery.
Several completely different battery technologies will probably
dominate the energy storage market.

Funding / award money needs to be crafted accordingly.


Bret Cahill
 
You haven't done much in law or politics, have you?

Irrelevant.

What is irrelevant?

Battery innovation?

Gummint funding for fundamental research?

McCain offered a $300,000,000 award to anyone who develops a "super
battery."  We don't have any numbers that would define "super."

That's politics. Just meaningless drivel for half of America -- those with
below-average intelligence.
Plato pointed out that if intelligent people think they are too good
for politics then they'll be ruled by a bunch of idiots.

Can we say "Dumbya?"


Bret Cahill
 
On Sep 5, 11:27 am, Bret Cahill <BretCah...@aol.com> wrote:

Therefor it would be cost effective to consider lower energy density
as well as lower efficiency in order to get a cheap battery/cycling
ratio.

The point is to cast as big a net as possible to get as many different
batteries as possible.
Right. You know, the world has lots of problems like the oil crisis.
And we all have a stake in solving these problems in time if we are
not to return to the days of Ox carts when the oil runs out.

That's why I agree with you. When a problem it important, the right
thing to do is always to do SOMETHING, even if it's the WRONG thing.
That way you can feel you are making a contribution however small to
mankind. Me? I'm bouncing a basketball to end the energy crisis! I've
been bouncing for weeks and there are no results yet but you have to
give me credit for trying!

Moron.

Lets just consider the battery "problem" for a second, OK?

1. Lead Acid. Old technology, reasonably reliable for a few years.
MANY years of experience with them. Heavy. Filled with nasty liquid.

2. Lead acid gel cell. Lower ratings, Heavy. Life in the few years at
best (replaced your UPS batteries lately? better think about it!)

3. Nickle Cadmium (liquid). Missile batteries. Not bad but liquid
filled. Not so good for things that move around.

4. Nickle Cadmium (typical cells you buy). Totally worthless as
batteries. Save your money. Go buy "real" batteries.

5. NiMh batteries. Step up in capacity but have a nasty habit of
losing charge while sitting on a shelf. So your camera is always half
charged when you grab it.

6. Li Nice high storage density battery. Wonderful performance that
you'd love to see in ALL your battery-operated devices! One little
catch. In 2-3 years capacity is half and in 5 years the thing needs
replaced and they are NOT cheap! (replaced your laptop battery
lately? Probably needs it. Only couple of hundred bucks. Oh yeah, you
can buy a whole new laptop for almost the price of just the battery.)

7. That "new" technology we are all waiting for. #6 but lasts 50
years. Hell, we'd settle for 20 years! Um, guess what? Nobody's
invented it yet. Maybe if we all start bouncing basketballs that new
battery will be invented. Better to do SOMETHING than to do NOTHING!
Cast that wide net!
 
On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 16:14:46 -0700 (PDT), BretCahill@peoplepc.com wrote:

You haven't done much in law or politics, have you?

You haven't done much, have you?

I called the bluff on your "money making patent" number which you are
too ashamed to post.
---
Not at all.

I own the patent and have its number, which I can divulge if I see fit.

So far, since I've shown that you're nothing but a troublemaker with an
agenda of self-promotion, I've chosen not to divulge the patent number
since doing so would just lead you into another round of idiotic insults
which you'd use in order to try to hide your abysmal stupidity.

JF
 

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