The Gem car has a 10 grand base sticker price, 13 grand as equipped when Chrysler demoed it at old town market, and may be elgible for a six grand federal tax rebate. It will also allow Chrysler to meet federal fleet mileage requirements and keep selling dodge pickups and suvs.

If this product meets Alan's needs, that is great. I'm not against all subsidies. I'm against stupid subsidies.

The point Arizona Legislaturer was making is that somebody can sell $900 worth of solar crap for $2700 because the buyer is elgible for tax breaks. Without this product benefitting anybody.

I've got solar panels on my house of which the government paid 40% of the cost. $2000 tax credit from the feds and $3.50 a watt from the municpal owned utility. But this benefits myself and my community. And I'm not going to get rich doing this. I'll probably get a reasonable rate of return depending on future electric prices.

How are we going to produce additional electricity going forward. The three possibilities that I see are, "clean" coal for which a demo plant doesn't exist let alone a commercial operating plant, liquified natural gas which is also ridiculously expensive and then the overseas gas runs out, and wind power which is also subsidized. It is illegal to build a nuke in california. You can try to build one in arizona and run a power line here, but the bananas will try to prevent you from building the power line. Presently, clean coal is a scam, where a utility will make cosmetic changes to the coal without benefitting anybody and be elgible for federal money.

Ethanol is another method the government hands out money without improving the energy situation. Of course farmers have been subsidized since the great depression and this only differs by scale and lack of transparency.

I've read some disturbing things about the reliability of sterling engines for thermosolar plants. But it isn't my field. I wonder if they too are simply farming the government.

One point, the power you are offsetting by equipping yourself with PV is the most expensive for the power utility. The peaking load has the highest cost to run (dirty and expensive fuels), it may be that you are saving the power company more money by going PV and alleviating peak daily power than they are paying you.

PV also allows you to lock in for a guaranteed amount of electricity (less .5% physical depreciation per annum) at the amount you paid originally. If power is going to get more expensive, you will save utilities much much more then by reducing the overall infrastructure needs as well as pollution.

PV panels pretty much only have 1 major pollutant, which is heavy metals, and this is a point source, easily containable in tailing ponds or using RO.

Reliability of Stirling engines. I do know something about that. Not everything, but something.

The engines used by SES on sun are derived from automotive kinematic engines. These are an old design and are VERY UNRELIABLE. The scuttlebutt I got from the technicians working there is that they are "trying to bring the mean time to failure up to 8 HOURS"!

That said, I also know that several companies are working on free piston stirling engines, which have the same high thermal efficiency, and are believed by NASA to have potential to last for HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF HOURS. The difference is that the free piston machines have no cranks, linkages or rolling contact bearings, nor any need for liquid lubricants; they use non-contact seals that do not wear.

Look on the web for Infinia and Sunpower.

The average person makes no such fine distinctions, and can easily fall into a funk regarding a perceived generic stirling that is "not reliable".

Interesting tidbits on the SES. Does the Solo have the same problem/issue as they are one of the only shipping firms of a dish.

And for others here:
A claimed design of a sub $100 1 HP stirling existed. Nitrogen charged, made from pressed sheet metal, with an 8000 hour life to rebuild, then another 8000 hours till 'death'.
A link to the firm: http://www.omachron.com/projects.html

I spent time looking for data on mean time to failure of stirling engiines. Found very little, and that not trustworthy. All the numbers I did find seemed to say that crank (kinematic) stirlings have mean time to failure at best a few thousand hours, and that with service intervals much shorter. But the numbers tested seemed too small to give any confidence in any of the statistics.

What I did find was a few citations for free piston coolers (not engines) that had lasted about 60,000hrs without failure, and fuzzy extrapolations from that indicated hundreds of thousands of hours mean time to failure.

Now there you are, stat guys. go figure and tell me I am all wet; I already know it.

But I have a more serious question. A simple one. What is the life of a device that is sufficient to allow it to function to a time that it becomes so obsolete that a sane user would replace it?

For a wood chisel, maybe a couple of hundred years? For a car, maybe 20 years? For a computer, maybe 5 years?

I believe we can right now make cost-effective stirlings that would do that- perform well to the day that they should be recycled.