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I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.
--
AnthonyL
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On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The reason why gas is cheaper than electricity is that the gas engine is
inherently inefficient. I think commercial ones are up to 50% efficient:
I don't think you'll get anything like that. An ICE might be 30% and a
steam engine more like 10%.

--
Max Demian
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On Friday, 5 May 2017 20:14:39 UTC+1, Max Demian wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The reason why gas is cheaper than electricity is that the gas engine is
inherently inefficient. I think commercial ones are up to 50% efficient:
I don't think you'll get anything like that. An ICE might be 30% and a
steam engine more like 10%.


If the OP hits 21%, which is doable, the electricity will cost the same 14p a unit in gas, but you'll get the extra heat free. It's done on larger scale, but a lot of mucking about for not a lot on a domestic scale.


NT
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On 5/5/2017 7:42 PM, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


One of my former colleagues was hoping to develop, after retiring, a
commercially viable domestic CHP source using a lorry turbocharger fired
by natural gas driving an electrical generator in a unit about the size
of a large boiler. I assume he was thinking about something like a
"dyson" high speed motor as the generator. I guess it never got beyond
the prototype stage.
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On 05/05/17 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Model aircraft turbines can be had BUT they are not very efficient.

And that's the problem. To turn that gas at 3p/kwh into electricity at
4p/kwh which is what a big CCGT plant does you need....well a big ccgt
plant!


--
€œit should be clear by now to everyone that activist environmentalism
(or environmental activism) is becoming a general ideology about humans,
about their freedom, about the relationship between the individual and
the state, and about the manipulation of people under the guise of a
'noble' idea. It is not an honest pursuit of 'sustainable development,'
a matter of elementary environmental protection, or a search for
rational mechanisms designed to achieve a healthy environment. Yet
things do occur that make you shake your head and remind yourself that
you live neither in Joseph Stalins Communist era, nor in the Orwellian
utopia of 1984.€

Vaclav Klaus


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On 05/05/17 20:14, Max Demian wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The reason why gas is cheaper than electricity is that the gas engine is
inherently inefficient. I think commercial ones are up to 50% efficient:


65%.

I don't think you'll get anything like that. An ICE might be 30%

40under noraml conditions

and a
steam engine more like 10%.

37% or up to 42% with supercritical steam at 400C or so.


--
€œit should be clear by now to everyone that activist environmentalism
(or environmental activism) is becoming a general ideology about humans,
about their freedom, about the relationship between the individual and
the state, and about the manipulation of people under the guise of a
'noble' idea. It is not an honest pursuit of 'sustainable development,'
a matter of elementary environmental protection, or a search for
rational mechanisms designed to achieve a healthy environment. Yet
things do occur that make you shake your head and remind yourself that
you live neither in Joseph Stalins Communist era, nor in the Orwellian
utopia of 1984.€

Vaclav Klaus
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On Friday, 5 May 2017 23:20:13 UTC+1, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 05/05/17 20:14, Max Demian wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The reason why gas is cheaper than electricity is that the gas engine is
inherently inefficient. I think commercial ones are up to 50% efficient:


65%.

I don't think you'll get anything like that. An ICE might be 30%

40under noraml conditions


if 'normal' means with all the bells & whistles huge power stations have. Without all that you'll get nowhere near. This is one of the problems with small scale generation.

and a
steam engine more like 10%.

37% or up to 42% with supercritical steam at 400C or so.


NT
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In article ,
AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.


Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.


ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The two retail prices are quite closely tied together. If it were
economical to generate electricity locally from gas it would be done that
way. But a small generator is never going to be as efficient as a large
one - specially when capital and running costs are included.

--
*If horrific means to make horrible, does terrific mean to make terrible?

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
...
In article ,
AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.


Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.


ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The two retail prices are quite closely tied together.


Like hell they are. There's a reason most use
gas instead of electricity to heat their house.

If it were economical to generate electricity
locally from gas it would be done that way.


But when the gas price sags, and the price of electricity
increases do to the stupid scrapping of coal fired power
generation and the subsiding of 'renewable' ****, there
may come a time when what didn’t previously make
sense, does now make sense.

But a small generator is never going to be as efficient as a large
one - specially when capital and running costs are included.


Doesn’t need to be. ALL it needs to do is provide
electricity more cheaply than buying it does.

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On Saturday, 6 May 2017 07:08:11 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote:

'renewable' ****, there
may come a time when what didnt previously make
sense, does now make sense.


if only that could be applied to you.


NT


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Some gutless ****wit desperately cowering behind
wrote just more of the **** that always
pours from the back of that desperately cowering gutless ****wit.

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On Saturday, 6 May 2017 08:12:52 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote:
Some gutless ****wit desperately cowering behind
tabbypurr wrote just more of the **** that always
pours from the back of that desperately cowering gutless ****wit.


Stick your fingers in some superglue. We could do with the rest.


NT
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On Friday, 5 May 2017 19:42:43 UTC+1, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.
--
AnthonyL


All been thought of years ago.
You can buy one, a box that generates electricity and heat using gas.

http://www.micro-chp.org.uk/domestic-chp/
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On 06/05/17 09:16, Brian Gaff wrote:
I'd imagine a jet might be a little noisy though.
The issue really is is it cost effective and what are the rules of doing
this and maybe selling spare back to the grid?



Golly gosh Brian. (Are you the Brian from the magic roundabout?) What
took you so long?

Don't you think if it were cheaper to build a gadget that plugged into
the gas supply and generated electricity the way a combi boiler
generates hot water, we wouldn't all have one?

Why do you think we deliver gas to houses, instead of hot water?

There's this funny thing called a 'market' which means that until
governments interfere, stuff that is cheap and works well and does
something useful just naturally gets deployed, and expensive stupid
ideas that are dreamt up by armchair greens and socialists,m never get
to first base.

And big ideas that take a lot of money to deploy, can collect small
amounts of money from people and add it all up and build big things.
Thats called capitalism. And when the big thing (like a nuclear power
staion and a national grid) does something better than lots of little
things (like domestic electricity generators running off diesel),
everybody benefits - as long as the shareholders don't get taxed by
government of course.

I bet the first thing your council would do is charge business rates if you
started to sell energy back.


Of course. Government is the enemy of the people.
All government is a self legalising protection racket.

That's why we have a democracy, so we can limit their power somewhat.

But that's why they like to control the media and the education system.
so you don't notice them exercising it.


Brian



--
Ideas are more powerful than guns. We would not let our enemies have
guns, why should we let them have ideas?

Josef Stalin
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In article ,
harry writes:
On Friday, 5 May 2017 19:42:43 UTC+1, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.
--
AnthonyL


All been thought of years ago.
You can buy one, a box that generates electricity and heat using gas.

http://www.micro-chp.org.uk/domestic-chp/


Not currently offering any products.
That's been the state of this field for last 15 years.

If you go to any of the trade shows, you will find lots of
combined heat and power units. However, they can't be made
small enough (in power output) and efficient enough for
domestic use. Over the last 15 years, products have appeared
on the market briefly, but rarely got past beta phase.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
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On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Why not just run an ordinary generator from gas? As long as you need
the heat as well, you'd be quids in, ignoring capital costs. And noise.
And safety.

Cheers
--
Clive
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On 06/05/17 13:34, Clive Arthur wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Why not just run an ordinary generator from gas? As long as you need
the heat as well, you'd be quids in, ignoring capital costs. And noise.
And safety.

Cheers

Well as the CHP in Denmark is testament to, you end up generating heat
beyond your needs.

5Kw is about what a house needs and that's about 6.6 brake horsepower

A small steam engine fed from a gas powered boiler could do that. At
about 20% efficiency. leaving you wit about 25KW of waste heat. Oh dear.
Thats enough to heat the house 5 times over in the depths of winter...


--
There is something fascinating about science. One gets such wholesale
returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment of fact.

Mark Twain
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On Saturday, 6 May 2017 13:34:25 UTC+1, Clive Arthur wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Why not just run an ordinary generator from gas? As long as you need
the heat as well, you'd be quids in, ignoring capital costs. And noise.
And safety.

Cheers


efficiency, noise, capital cost, run cost, reliability, payback, failure to use the heat, anything I missed?


NT


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On 06/05/2017 14:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 06/05/17 13:34, Clive Arthur wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Why not just run an ordinary generator from gas? As long as you need
the heat as well, you'd be quids in, ignoring capital costs. And noise.
And safety.

Cheers

Well as the CHP in Denmark is testament to, you end up generating heat
beyond your needs.

5Kw is about what a house needs and that's about 6.6 brake horsepower

A small steam engine fed from a gas powered boiler could do that. At
about 20% efficiency. leaving you wit about 25KW of waste heat. Oh dear.
Thats enough to heat the house 5 times over in the depths of winter...


Well, I suppose you'd size it according to the heating needs rather than
the electricity needs and use the grid as an AC accumulator. The
*average* household electricity consumption is about 500W, I think,
although the shorter term winter average (when you needed the heat)
would be more.

It's probably not practical, or it would already be done, and obviously,
only a small proportion of people could do it.

Cheers
--
Clive
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On Saturday, 6 May 2017 16:31:31 UTC+1, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 06/05/17 14:33, tabbypurr wrote:
On Saturday, 6 May 2017 13:34:25 UTC+1, Clive Arthur wrote:
On 05/05/2017 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Why not just run an ordinary generator from gas? As long as you need
the heat as well, you'd be quids in, ignoring capital costs. And noise.
And safety.

Cheers


efficiency, noise, capital cost, run cost, reliability, payback, failure to use the heat, anything I missed?

smell?


CO hazard


NT
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In article ,
Clive Arthur writes:
On 06/05/2017 14:29, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Well as the CHP in Denmark is testament to, you end up generating heat
beyond your needs.

5Kw is about what a house needs and that's about 6.6 brake horsepower

A small steam engine fed from a gas powered boiler could do that. At
about 20% efficiency. leaving you wit about 25KW of waste heat. Oh dear.
Thats enough to heat the house 5 times over in the depths of winter...


Well, I suppose you'd size it according to the heating needs rather than
the electricity needs and use the grid as an AC accumulator. The
*average* household electricity consumption is about 500W, I think,
although the shorter term winter average (when you needed the heat)
would be more.

It's probably not practical, or it would already be done, and obviously,
only a small proportion of people could do it.


It was done - Whispergen and another I forget made domestic boilers
with 1kW electricity output. They weren't viable and the companies
abandoned the domestic products when the development subsidies were
withdrawn.

A set of 4 or 5 major domestic boiler manufacturers then setup shared
research into this field, but I'm not aware it resulted in any products.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]


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On 5/5/2017 11:18 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 05/05/17 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Model aircraft turbines can be had BUT they are not very efficient.

And that's the problem. To turn that gas at 3p/kwh into electricity at
4p/kwh which is what a big CCGT plant does you need....well a big ccgt
plant!


+1

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On 5/6/2017 12:16 AM, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article ,
AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.


Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.


ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


The two retail prices are quite closely tied together. If it were
economical to generate electricity locally from gas it would be done that
way. But a small generator is never going to be as efficient as a large
one - specially when capital and running costs are included.

Is this a first, you and TNP in agreement!

:-)
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On 5/6/2017 12:36 PM, Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article ,
harry writes:
On Friday, 5 May 2017 19:42:43 UTC+1, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.
--
AnthonyL


All been thought of years ago.
You can buy one, a box that generates electricity and heat using gas.

http://www.micro-chp.org.uk/domestic-chp/


Not currently offering any products.
That's been the state of this field for last 15 years.

If you go to any of the trade shows, you will find lots of
combined heat and power units. However, they can't be made
small enough (in power output) and efficient enough for
domestic use. Over the last 15 years, products have appeared
on the market briefly, but rarely got past beta phase.

That was my belief, glad to see it confirmed!
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On 5/6/2017 12:11 PM, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , AnthonyL
wrote:

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.


You can get small jet engines from, f'rinstance, these people:

http://www.wrenpowersystems.com/index.html

I've no idea whether anything like that would be suitable or not. They
didn't obviously have prices but they were IIRC not that expensive.

As I said elsewhere, a turbocharger turbine is somewhat comparable. But
they run at getting on for 100,000 rpm. Gearing is never going to be an
option, but perhaps something like the Dyson "digital" motors might be
adaptable.
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Some gutless ****wit desperately cowering behind
tabbypurr wrote just more of the **** that always pours
from the back of that desperately cowering gutless ****wit.



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On Fri, 5 May 2017 13:06:30 -0700 (PDT), wrote:


If the OP hits 21%, which is doable, the electricity will cost the same 14p a unit in gas, but you'll get the extra heat free. It's done on larger scale, but a lot of mucking about for not a lot on a domestic scale.


Does no one remember the calor totem from the 80s. It supplied the
electricity needs of three households but the achilles heel was engine
life was only about a year, 1100cc FIAT I think.

I'm not sure why the various Stirling units failed, they were about
1kW(e) and 9kW(t), British gas were going to install 3000 in
Manchester but pulled out, the NZ company that made them still exists.
They were supposed to offer the life of a freezer and the utility of a
gas boiler all for around six times the cost of a traditional boiler.

I've actually run a 1kW(e) Honda generator in the evenings for two
years with no issues until it got stolen from the caravan, so engine
life need not be a problem but matching size to demand is.

In the 90s installed a 10kW(e) Petter genset based chp at a remote
classroom and the electricity cost about the same as the diesel used
plus the operation and maintenance costs so not worthwhile if grid
connected, just under 20% efficient because it was sized for peak
loads and ran at 10% most of the time which was inefficient.

My old boss now installs wood pellet chp which back feed the grid,
they have one that's been online for 2 years, but that all hinges on a
generous feed in tariff.

Conversely the National Trust have finally gone overboard for wood
energy and in qualifying for RHI have removed a number of oversized
chip boilers and replaced by new, these are for heat only, at one
property where a micro hydro electric scheme has been replaced rather
than backfeed the grid they have opted to use excess electricity to
power immersion elements in the thermal store.

AJH
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On Fri, 5 May 2017 23:18:48 +0100, The Natural Philosopher
wrote:


Model aircraft turbines can be had BUT they are not very efficient.

And that's the problem. To turn that gas at 3p/kwh into electricity at
4p/kwh which is what a big CCGT plant does you need....well a big ccgt
plant!


15 years ago we ran a LS60 apu on woodgas briefly, it worked but my
colleague estimated a gas turbine would not be viable as a genrator
prime mover less than 300kW(e)

AJH
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In article ,
writes:
On Fri, 5 May 2017 13:06:30 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:


If the OP hits 21%, which is doable, the electricity will cost the same 14p a unit in gas, but you'll get the extra heat free. It's done on larger scale, but a lot of mucking about for not a lot on a domestic scale.


Does no one remember the calor totem from the 80s. It supplied the
electricity needs of three households but the achilles heel was engine
life was only about a year, 1100cc FIAT I think.


Cars (of that type) are only designed for 3000 hours use.
That gets you to roughly 100,000 miles at an average 30MPH.

I'm not sure why the various Stirling units failed, they were about
1kW(e) and 9kW(t), British gas were going to install 3000 in
Manchester but pulled out, the NZ company that made them still exists.
They were supposed to offer the life of a freezer and the utility of a
gas boiler all for around six times the cost of a traditional boiler.


The development was funded by the likes of Eon, British Gas, etc.
The products vanished when the development funding ceased.
I think this was probably down to them never being economic to
sell without hefty subsidies, due to inefficient energy production
in small units for domestic use.

I've actually run a 1kW(e) Honda generator in the evenings for two
years with no issues until it got stolen from the caravan, so engine
life need not be a problem but matching size to demand is.

In the 90s installed a 10kW(e) Petter genset based chp at a remote
classroom and the electricity cost about the same as the diesel used
plus the operation and maintenance costs so not worthwhile if grid
connected, just under 20% efficient because it was sized for peak
loads and ran at 10% most of the time which was inefficient.

My old boss now installs wood pellet chp which back feed the grid,
they have one that's been online for 2 years, but that all hinges on a
generous feed in tariff.

Conversely the National Trust have finally gone overboard for wood
energy and in qualifying for RHI have removed a number of oversized
chip boilers and replaced by new, these are for heat only, at one
property where a micro hydro electric scheme has been replaced rather
than backfeed the grid they have opted to use excess electricity to
power immersion elements in the thermal store.


I installed Aircon at home 12 years ago. It was for cooling my main
living area when working at home, but I actually use it in reverse
to heat the area in winter when working at home, rather than heating
the whole house. For first few years, I had it on a power meter, and
using it as an air-sourced heat pump cost very little to heat the
room all winter, vastly less than heating the whole house all day
with gas central heating just because I'm working in one room.
It only gets used for cooling a few days a year, but for heating,
probably 50 days a year.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]
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In article ,
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
Does no one remember the calor totem from the 80s. It supplied the
electricity needs of three households but the achilles heel was engine
life was only about a year, 1100cc FIAT I think.


Cars (of that type) are only designed for 3000 hours use.
That gets you to roughly 100,000 miles at an average 30MPH.


There's a very big difference between normal start stop driving and
running at constant load, on an engine's life.

If it really were designed for a 3000 hour life with normal use, I'd
expect many times that with a generator. Presumably with the engine
running at somewhere near maximum torque, so therefore efficiency.

--
*If at first you do succeed, try not to look too astonished.

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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"Andrew Gabriel" wrote in message
news
In article ,
writes:
On Fri, 5 May 2017 13:06:30 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:


If the OP hits 21%, which is doable, the electricity will cost the same
14p a unit in gas, but you'll get the extra heat free. It's done on
larger scale, but a lot of mucking about for not a lot on a domestic
scale.


Does no one remember the calor totem from the 80s. It supplied the
electricity needs of three households but the achilles heel was engine
life was only about a year, 1100cc FIAT I think.


Cars (of that type) are only designed for 3000 hours use.


BULL****.

That gets you to roughly 100,000 miles at an average 30MPH.

I'm not sure why the various Stirling units failed, they were about
1kW(e) and 9kW(t), British gas were going to install 3000 in
Manchester but pulled out, the NZ company that made them still exists.
They were supposed to offer the life of a freezer and the utility of a
gas boiler all for around six times the cost of a traditional boiler.


The development was funded by the likes of Eon, British Gas, etc.
The products vanished when the development funding ceased.
I think this was probably down to them never being economic to
sell without hefty subsidies, due to inefficient energy production
in small units for domestic use.

I've actually run a 1kW(e) Honda generator in the evenings for two
years with no issues until it got stolen from the caravan, so engine
life need not be a problem but matching size to demand is.

In the 90s installed a 10kW(e) Petter genset based chp at a remote
classroom and the electricity cost about the same as the diesel used
plus the operation and maintenance costs so not worthwhile if grid
connected, just under 20% efficient because it was sized for peak
loads and ran at 10% most of the time which was inefficient.

My old boss now installs wood pellet chp which back feed the grid,
they have one that's been online for 2 years, but that all hinges on a
generous feed in tariff.

Conversely the National Trust have finally gone overboard for wood
energy and in qualifying for RHI have removed a number of oversized
chip boilers and replaced by new, these are for heat only, at one
property where a micro hydro electric scheme has been replaced rather
than backfeed the grid they have opted to use excess electricity to
power immersion elements in the thermal store.


I installed Aircon at home 12 years ago. It was for cooling my main
living area when working at home, but I actually use it in reverse
to heat the area in winter when working at home, rather than heating
the whole house. For first few years, I had it on a power meter, and
using it as an air-sourced heat pump cost very little to heat the
room all winter, vastly less than heating the whole house all day
with gas central heating just because I'm working in one room.
It only gets used for cooling a few days a year, but for heating,
probably 50 days a year.



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On Sat, 6 May 2017 20:34:57 +0100, newshound
wrote:

On 5/5/2017 11:18 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 05/05/17 19:42, AnthonyL wrote:
I was watching the early development of electricity generation and
houses had their own coal fired generators before power distribution
became widespread.

Now is the time of year my fuel contracts come up for renewal; I can
get gas at less that 3p/kwH but my electricity supplier (soon not to
be) has upped their rate to nearly 14p/kwH which had me wondering
about the economics of using the cheaper gas to generate my
electricity.

ok, a bit t-i-c but it'd be fun having my own steam generator
(modified boiler?), turbine and generator. I recall a viable jet
engine (intended for VTOL some 45yrs ago) that could be picked up by
one person so a turbine needn't be too big.

Model aircraft turbines can be had BUT they are not very efficient.

And that's the problem. To turn that gas at 3p/kwh into electricity at
4p/kwh which is what a big CCGT plant does you need....well a big ccgt
plant!


+1


I'll keep an eye on Ebay to see if one comes up cheap.

--
AnthonyL
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AnthonyL wrote:

The Natural Philosopher wrote:

a big ccgt plant!


I'll keep an eye on Ebay to see if one comes up cheap.


I think you were asking about Ratcliffe the other week? I happened to
drive past on Friday and the coal heaps looked very well stocked and
neatly raked over ... suppose the bulldozer drivers have to do something
over summer?

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