Author Topic: Electric shock in Texas  (Read 398 times)

Richard230

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Electric shock in Texas
« on: February 21, 2021, 08:30:47 PM »
This month was not the time to recharge your Tesla at home.   :o
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HadesOmega

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Re: Electric shock in Texas
« Reply #1 on: February 22, 2021, 05:22:48 AM »
Wow that is crazy that is exactly why I am building my own hybrid off grid solar system to reduce dependence on these energy companies.
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Re: Electric shock in Texas
« Reply #2 on: February 22, 2021, 05:33:20 AM »
Hi, here in the UK some companies do offer half hour prices. However these are published in advance and for residential customers capped a 35p/kWh. Standard cost is 15p/kWh. Customers on these tarrifs eg octopus agile can on occasion also be paid to consume power!
My experience of big industry is different, prices are half hourly however the power company can notify you of likely peak demand and thus spot prices. To counter this, companies predict when this will happen ( 5pm to 6pm on dark freezing days) and either stop/limit production and switch to backup power for the duration. We had diesel pumps to replace electric. Jet turbine generator units and gas fed boilers to run steam turbines to generate power. The consumption and generation was shown in real time to avoid errors.
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