Like a Tornado Through a Solar Farm – IOTW Report

Like a Tornado Through a Solar Farm

Drone footage Here

The Lake Placid Solar Power Plant is located in Highlands County, Fla., and suffered damage during Hurricane Milton. The facility opened in December 2019 and is 45 megawatts, which is enough to power more than 12,000 homes at peak production. 

21 Comments on Like a Tornado Through a Solar Farm

  1. solar and wind power is fine, so long as it is only ever considered as supplementary power, not primary power. Until research and development can bring supplementary power up to the level where it can compete with coal, gas and nuclear, it is only a functional prototype that is still being developed.

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  2. Federal regulation just shut down coal fired Homer City Power plant last year. It was a 2000 MW plant. If this solar field survived, it would take 44 of them to replace it. No environmental impact from 44 of these ugly fields right?

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  3. That looks like a tornado touched down on it.
    Imagine the deadly situation when the millions of shards of glass from all those broken panels where being thrown around at 100+ mph.

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  4. @ Harry TUESDAY, 15 OCTOBER 2024, 17:36 AT 5:36 PM

    No, solar and wind are not fine when taxpayers are forced to fund the illusions of others who are not competent to calculate or even comprehend the cost or are profiting off of selling a pipe dream.

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  5. JD – You’re right when it is used as a political tool, but as proper energy reseach it represents steps we need to take in order to reach other solutions. Maybe coal, gas and nuclear are the only solutions, but we won’t know unless we keep up the research. It’s like the old waste basket theory of engineering: draw up an idea, throw rocks at it, refine it, crumple up the first one, throw it in the waste basket and draw up the next step. The progress never stops.

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  6. Although I have never owned a home, seems like solar on roofs is sensible. And when are they needed? When sun is at its peak and AC is required. Seems like a good supplemental use, as a variable power input.

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  7. If you want to put solar panels on your house, go for it. But there are reasons you don’t see them on a lot roofs. You’re not going to want shade trees near your house. The panels start losing efficiency from day one and you’ll need to clean them regularly. Snow cover? Yeah. The panels put additional loading on your roof, and if you need roof repairs? Yeah. And after 20 years tops they’re shot. If you’re lucky the things might pay for themselves.

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  8. Be sure to research every aspect of solar before buying. Think about this: If solar penciled out we’d all be scrambling to buy a solar system. But we’re witnessing just the opposite. Solar system salespeople are just irritating the living sh*t out of us to invest. We recently moved from the Phoenix area where only a fraction of our neighbors bought solar. Two years later most of them said their solar systems did not live up claims. Most painful experience? Too many Solar companies don’t survive. Good luck with your warranty.

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  9. Don’t worry, the toxic chemicals in the solar panels won’t ever get in the soil or the groundwater… well, unless there’s a big storm… then, you need a hazmat team just to clean up the glass shards because of all the lead and cadmium and other dangerous substances released.

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  10. Before you put solar electric panels on your house, please ask a fireman what he thinks. Then ask your homeowner’s insurance agent what will happen to your fire insurance bill.

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  11. And if they are wired into the grid so you can back feed the power company to make them pay for that power and then the power grid goes out your solar is off until the power comes back on.
    They should require a bypass switch.
    A friend of mine needs a new roof, guess what? No will remove the panels.

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