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"I thought we had got to the bottom of the 'laws of physics' - are you still questioning my claims?"There are two ways your idea could be made to work.Make it vastly cheaper or get much more energy from it.I was covering both bases.
EDIT2: I wonder how this stacks up against wind power? I do know that the economics of wind power are (to put it politely) a wee bit dodgy, and the aesthetic impact of wind power can be really horrible. The last time I was in Scotland, I was pretty disgusted by the desecration I observed.
I don't agree that the " potential revenue stream is theoretically possible".
I don't think you would get a meaningful patent for your idea as it touches on .........
Mootle,The biggest (by far) uncertainty in the revenue is some theoretical subsidy that a government might pay.You seem to think the revenue stream is adequate.I don't.The numbers (uncertain though they are) are on my side.It wasn't going to make money, even with a stupidly large subsidy.
"What ever you think, the government incentives are extant - if you are a citizen of the UK you're already paying for the policy to which Tony Blair committed the UK to many years ago."I'm a UK citizen. I'm aware of the analogous subsidy for some forms of renewable energy.I'm also aware that the original planned subsidy is due to come to an end.The current government is not enthusiastic about spending money (in general) so I wouldn't like to build a business case on the current subsidy.On one side we have a cost measured inn tens or hundreds of millions. On the other we have a reliable revenue measured in hundreds of thousands per year.The numbers on one side really are bigger than those on the other. The side of the argument they favour is clearly the side that says "This is silly and will never work in a month of Sundays".As far as I can tell, that's my side, not yours.I know the suppliers are required to use renewables.But they are not stupid.I can go into town and pay £150 for a 50W wind turbine. so, with no economies of scale or government subsidy I can get power for £3 per W.http://www.maplin.co.uk/50w-telescopic-vertical-axis-wind-turbine-396269Your system produced something like 0.8MW ( ignoring efficiencies)I could get that from 16000 similar wind turbines (it would be a stupid way to do it, but I could). That would cost me £2.4MOr I could spend something like 10 or 100 times more on untested technology.How stupid would I have to be to do that?
The power generation rates are not speculative.
The price of the wind turbines are not speculative.
The only speculation and nonsense are your strange idea that your system will somehow become vastly cheaper than it is.
Time has, for all practical purposes, already told.You (almost certainly) can't make one vital component of your system for the money it would cost to set up a known system.
I was quite encouraged by the "economy version", so I thought it might actually be useful in remote locations if it wasn't too expensive. I started with the assumption that I wanted to power a single 13A 230V outlet on Muckle Flugga - not continuously mind you - only while the tide was coming in at its maximum rate.Assumptions:The tide is rising at 0.15 mm/s.Overall conversion efficiency to electricity is 60%So,Work is being done by rising tide at 4.6kJ/sForce on ram is 4600/0.00015 = 30MNDisplacement of float is 30/10 = 3 Mega kg or 3000 tonnes.The large floaty thing still needs to displace the equivalent of 1.5 million two litre soda bottles, and the anchor better weigh about 6000 tonnes.Unless I mucked something up here (which is highly possible) this scheme is Le canard mort.
Your system wasn't fully defined so I've run a rough order calculation for a continuous 3kW demand.
You might get an Arts Council grant to cover the cost.
"What seasonal efficiency do you think your turbine will achieve. A quick google of micro wind turbines will tell you that your own gut feeling for making such a comparison was indeed 'stupid'."Yes, But I did it on purpose.I deliberately chose a ridiculous system and I ignored obvious factors like the fact that you wouldn't use such small generators and also that you would qualify for a bulk discount. I also ignored the fact that these things only run when the wind blows. Of course, the importance of that depends on where you put them. Where I live the mean wind speed isn't high enough to turn that generator.However, in spite of all that - which as you say makes them stupid.The purchase cost is still less than your idea. Not marginally less, not a bit less, but a whole lot less. Something like £2.4M rather than tens or hundreds of millions. You keep saying that time will tell what the true cost will be. Fair enough, but can you (as I have asked before) come up with some explanation of why you feel that you will be able to make this cheaper than, for example, a scarp supertanker?Incidentally, you say"I don't plan to use a traditional anchor. "presumably that means you plan to use something more expensive or you think that the professionals have been getting it wrong all this time.Your idea that the government will suddenly decide to fund your dead duck rather than, for example this live one is the baffling thinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salter's_duckThe government thinks renewable power is a good thing. So do I, but that's not the point.So they will fund schemes to generate it.But they won't fund any old scheme. They schemes have to compete against each other.Since there's no way that you can build yours for less than roughly 10 times the cost of a bunch of stupidly inefficient ones which deliver the same power, there's no incentive for them to fund it.You will always make a loss on this.