electric cycle path anyone?

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Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
I can't help wondering if it'll be slippy, especially when wet....

I'm all in favour of making use of otherwise empty space (barn roofs etc) for solar panels though.
 

Night Train

Maker of Things
I'm with Arch on this. Shiny clear glass probably isn't the best road surface.

It would be better if it was on rooftops.
I always wondered why petrol station canopies didn't have solar panels on. It is a huge flat surface that does nothing other then keep motorists dry when filling up so it might has well have fixed to tracking panels on it. It isn't like it would 'damage' the appearance of the petrol station.
Bus shelter roofs are the same deal, they could also be solar generating.
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
I'm with Arch on this. Shiny clear glass probably isn't the best road surface.

It would be better if it was on rooftops.
I always wondered why petrol station canopies didn't have solar panels on. It is a huge flat surface that does nothing other then keep motorists dry when filling up so it might has well have fixed to tracking panels on it. It isn't like it would 'damage' the appearance of the petrol station.
Bus shelter roofs are the same deal, they could also be solar generating.

Exactly! There are lots of places that panels could go. I guess the panel technology will get lighter and lighter, allowing them to be put on more and more roofs.
 

mark barker

New Member
Location
Swindon, Wilts
Surely the surface wouldn't need to be smooth? Crushed glass bonded with some kind of resin could provide grip and still transfer the light so the panels can do their job.
 

Night Train

Maker of Things
Surely the surface wouldn't need to be smooth? Crushed glass bonded with some kind of resin could provide grip and still transfer the light so the panels can do their job.

Efficiency is bad enough with perfectly clear glass. Use crushed glass and resin and it would be useless. This is where solar heating is better as it works in any light and is sometimes better with diffused light.

Maybe it would be better as a canopy over the cycle lane to keep some of the weather off the cyclists.
Maybe it could include induction charging for electric bikes too. That could encourage the use of electric assist cargo bikes and trikes for commercial use.
 

marinyork

Resting in suspended Animation
Location
Logopolis
Efficiency is bad enough with perfectly clear glass. Use crushed glass and resin and it would be useless. This is where solar heating is better as it works in any light and is sometimes better with diffused light.

Better? Efficiency is one thing, but what is the point of heating up water and 'wasting' the energy? I think the value of it on a small scale urban situations is vastly overstated. Solar heating has it's uses, but we live in a mild climate it's not like we should have the need for vast amounts of heated water in small homes. Gas is a precious resource, we shouldn't be wasting that either. We should really be heating up much less water whatever the source.

Maybe it would be better as a canopy over the cycle lane to keep some of the weather off the cyclists.
Maybe it could include induction charging for electric bikes too. That could encourage the use of electric assist cargo bikes and trikes for commercial use.

Reminds me of where ever it was in the middle east that wanted air conditioned canopies over cycle lanes. I like your suggestion altogether more though, however practical it might be.
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
Better? Efficiency is one thing, but what is the point of heating up water and 'wasting' the energy?

Well, hot water is quite useful stuff - doing the washing up etc....

Heat it enough, and you can generate power from it anyway.
 

Wobblers

Euthermic
Location
Minkowski Space
Better? Efficiency is one thing, but what is the point of heating up water and 'wasting' the energy? I think the value of it on a small scale urban situations is vastly overstated. Solar heating has it's uses, but we live in a mild climate it's not like we should have the need for vast amounts of heated water in small homes. Gas is a precious resource, we shouldn't be wasting that either. We should really be heating up much less water whatever the source.

Solar cells are around 18% efficient at best. Using solar for heating - either water or space heating - is by far and away the most effective use of solar energy in places like the UK where there is a significant demand for heating throughout much of the year.

Roughening the surface would degrade the output, but not hugely. The biggest issue is that the solar cell surface of the cycle path would be susceptible to damage - it's a tough environment. Getting it to cope with rain and frost would probably not be easy. (Just think of what December's cold snap has done to the road surfaces!)
 
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