Title: Meet the Joule Box- a Portable Hydrogen Power Station Source:
Hydrogen House Project/Mike Strizki URL Source:http://hydrogenhouseproject.org/jou ... x-portable-charge-station.html Published:Nov 1, 2013 Author:Mike Strizki Post Date:2015-04-10 11:40:52 by Operation 40 Keywords:Hydrogen, renewable, Energy Views:6629 Comments:11
Hydrogen House Project presents the Joule Box Hydrogen Charge Station. This portable power plant stores renewable wind and solar energy as hydrogen gas providing back-up power for homes and businesses, while also serving as a refueling station for electric and hydrogen vehicles. http://hydrogenhouseproject.org/joule-box-portable-charge-station.html
Hydrogen Fuel Cells Could Add Year-Round Reliability to Renewable Energy NJ Spotlight | Jon Hurdle | April 3, 2013
Mike Strizki's 'Hydrogen House' weathers superstorm Sandy with lights blazing and plenty of hot water
Since 2006, Mike Strizki has been living off the grid, generating all the electricity he needs for his 3,000 square-foot house from solar panels, and drawing on energy stored in hydrogen and converted by fuel cells when there isnt enough sun power to meet his domestic demand.
He has around 100 solar panels mounted on rooftops, patches of ground, and mobile appliances dotted around his 12-acre compound in the woods near Hopewell, and has 11 hydrogen tanks to store excess energy for use during the sun-starved winter months.
The Hydrogen House, which Strizki says is the only one of its kind in the western hemisphere, is intended to demonstrate that solar power can be an infinitely available, emissions-free, year-round source of energy that isnt limited by weather, as is often claimed by critics of renewable fuels. If widely applied, the technology could make deep cuts in carbon emissions while ensuring individual energy security, cutting oil imports, and perhaps even reducing planetary exposure to the environmental havoc that comes from burning fossil fuels, Strizki said...snip
Brought to you by Solar Hydrogen Pioneer Mike Strizki, who was featured in a 2008 Scientific American article called "Inside the Solar Hydrogen House"
Inside the Solar-Hydrogen House: No More Power Bills--Ever A New Jersey resident generates and stores all the power he needs with solar panels and hydrogen Scientific American | June 19, 2008 |By David Biello
EAST AMWELL, N.J.Mike Strizki has not paid an electric, oil or gas billnor has he spent a nickel to fill up his Mercury Sablein nearly two years. Instead, the 51-year-old civil engineer makes all the fuel he needs using a system he built in the capacious garage of his home, which employs photovoltaic (PV) panels to turn sunlight into electricity that is harnessed in turn to extract hydrogen from tap water.
..."The ability to make your own fuel is priceless," says the man known as "Mr. Gadget" to his friends. He boasts a collection of hydrogen-powered and electric vehicles, including a hydrogen-run lawn mower and car (the Sable, which he redesigned and named the "Genesis") as well as an electric racing boat, and even an electric motorcycle. "All the technology is off-the-shelf. All I'm doing is putting them together."..snip MORE: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/hydrogen-house/
If widely applied, the technology could make deep cuts in carbon emissions while ensuring individual energy security, cutting oil imports, and perhaps even reducing planetary exposure to the environmental havoc that comes from burning fossil fuels, Strizki said.
But at a typical cost of $60,000 to $90,000 after rebates and tax credits, the equipment that powers the house is beyond the reach of the average homeowner, even if he or she has the space to fit a dozen hydrogen tanks in the backyard. Critics have said the Hydrogen House is a utopian project thats unlikely ever to be widely replicated.
[...]
The Joule Box price starts at $30,000 and goes to $75,000 for a fully loaded model that includes solar panels, wind turbine, and water-purification plant. The device also includes a meter to measure the power generated that will qualify for solar renewable energy certificates (SRECs).
Strizki makes the Joule Box himself, and customers have to buy it directly from him. He's looking for investors to back a manufacturing facility.
Although the price tag is still significant, its a lot less than it would have been a decade ago, thanks largely to a plunge in solar-panel prices which have dropped from $10 a watt in 2004 to 60 cents a watt now, Strizki said.
This guy sponges a lot of free expensive equipment from various companies so he can produce these puff pieces.
I'd probably be bitter and angry too if I was 60+ years old and never left mommy's basement.
Regular consumers cannot afford to just go buy these various systems that he's mostly gotten for free. It's a con job.
He put his money where his mouth is. You post negativity on an obscure website. If anyone would know about con jobs, it's you. Your whole act is a con job.
Why the alt energy people think it's relevant to prattle on about this guy as though anyone else could do it shows just how gullible they are.
ROFL
This article doesn't tell you about the millions of dollars worth of free top-notch tech he's gotten by begging it off various manufacturers.
Because prototypes never happen!
I'd like to see Willie or Op40 go buy this stuff off the shelf. They'd quickly find it costs hundreds of thousands.
Like this 1956 5 MB hard drive!
The IBM 350 Disk Storage Unit was rolled out in 1956 to be used with the IBM 305 RAMAC to provide storage capacities of five, 10, 15 or 20 million characters. It was configured with 50 magnetic disks containing 50,000 sectors, each of which held 100 alphanumeric characters.
I'm going to make it my job to post hydrogen updates on a semi-regular basis. But I won't be seeing your asinine "comments", unless I happen to browse without logging in. Have fun!
Because nothing mass produced ever gets cheaper. Jeeze this place is like a morgue sometimes. See the 1956 hard drive above? Can you draw any conclusions from that? What did your first computer cost and what was it capable of?
What did your first computer cost and what was it capable of?
My first computer was a 1981 (maybe 1980) original IBM PC that ran at 4.7 megahertz! And had TWO - count 'em, TWO 360K floppy drives!
It was way better than the TSR-80s, and Apple 2s that I used in high school. Was a bit better than the IBM 370s that I learned 370 assembly language on in college - using punch cards - yes punch cards...
But I eventually bought a 20 megabyte Seagate hard drive for the IBM - and moved into the 'real world'.
Oh - I forget what the IBM cost exactly - but it was in the neighborhood of $3000.
And yes, friends, my new 3.8 gigahertz AMD machine - all the parts, anyway - are still on the dining room table. I've been very busy. 3.8 Ghz (4 Ghz Turbo), 4 GB RAM, 1TB 7200 RPM SATA HD, DVDRW drive, - etc... $225 - after rebates. Woo Hoo!
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EDIT:$225 - after rebates.
My mistake:
$225 was for only the machine itself. The 1TB hard drive was $60 - $75 more. But the whole deal was from Tiger Direct.
I'm going to make it my job to post hydrogen updates on a semi-regular basis. But I won't be seeing your asinine "comments", unless I happen to browse without logging in. Have fun!
All you seem to do is post various press releases of real-soon-now products. Which never seem to become available. We've heard this stuff for decades. Even this article consists mostly of reprinting a gushy piece from 2008.