Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: delboyInteresting to see on page 8 that an electric train emits 50g/passenger/km, while a diesel HST train is 60mg and a diesel Meridian train is around 95mg.
Posted By: delboyWhat is the power load of an 8 carriage electric train?The load is the same whether it's electric or diesel - it's the weight that determines the load.
Posted By: delboyThe other thing was that on page 7 it says that electricity is much cheaper than diesel. Is that really right?
Posted By: Paul in Montrealdid you miss the m from the electric figures?No, for comparability I should think neither should have the 'm'. Electric 50g/pass.km, diesel 95g/pass/km. Compares with Fiat Panda 1.1Eco 119g/km, with however many passengers.
Posted By: delboyaround 95mg ... This is carbon (rather than CO2Why did anyone start talking of 'carbon' savings rather than CO2 savings? Carbon is 'harmless' (e.g. the more of it you can embody/sequester in a building, the better) - it's when oxidised it's a problem.
Posted By: delboyNot sure what HST & Meridian areHST = High Speed Train aka Intercity 125, 70s design, the workhorse of the western mainlines at least, the nicest trains around in my opinion - I shall miss them, just like Concorde.
Posted By: MrTit's impressive speed is down to the electric motorsDo you mean 'impressive acceleration'? - that's what electric motors excel at - max torque from standstill.
Posted By: menziesI do not agree that we need to move "people and goods" around.You're been deliberately obtuse here. How the heck do people who currently live in cities get their food if there's no way to move goods around? Maybe in a distant future when everyone's living on the land again. Meanwhile, back in the real world for now, you do need to move stuff around. And electric trains facilitate this in the most flexible way possible.
Posted By: fostertomScrap the railways!I thought the Tories already pretty much did that when they privatized them, didn't they?
Posted By: SimonHAll you need then is some overhead cables on the motorway networks/trunk roadsSuspend tensile camouflage fabric roofs and sidewalls from the masts, make it all disappear!
Posted By: James Nortonrun off waste oil.
Posted By: James Nortonno good for the whole population (supply etc) but hey solar alone or wind alone will not work either.
Posted By: James NortonPosted By: James Nortonno good for the whole population (supply etc) but hey solar alone or wind alone will not work either.
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Posted By: SteamyTeawhere is the improvement in 20 years?Absolutely - any kind of IC powered device is pushing further and further towards a low absolute max theoretical efficiency barrier of around 30% (anyone confirm?), which can't be exceeded no matter how many sqillions of R&D are thrown at it. It is shockingly irresponsible that the motor industry has simply continued down that blind alley, without government incentive or compulsion to do otherwise, for 35yrs at least, since the writing appeared on the wall.
Posted By: SteamyTeaIC engines have improved vastly in the last 40 yearsThere was plenty of room for improvement, but inherent diminishing returns make all that R&D a blind alley - could have gone elsewhere.
Posted By: SteamyTeawould need to know the kw and torque figures through the rev range and mass of fuel used to work it outsurely a well-rehearsed calc?
Posted By: SteamyTeabut there will be a limitdo we know what that theoretical limit is?
Posted By: SteamyTeaelectric car, not sold on the 'eco' credentials thoughWhy's that - the rare materials that go into the batteriers, or if fossil fuel's used to charge em up?
Posted By: SteamyTeadump it into car batteries and loose 50% efficiencywhat happens to the lost 50%? Heat - useful? is it really 50%?