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posted by takyon on Friday May 01 2015, @04:40PM   Printer-friendly
from the big-buzz dept.

Tesla has announced a consumer-grade home battery named "Powerwall" that will be available in 2 sizes. The battery can recharge at night when electricity rates are low, and then run your house during the day. It is designed for solar charging, and can return power back to the grid or enable autonomous, off-the-grid living.

Some think that this Tesla technology may be the saving grace for the power grid due to home generation and back-flow issues. There have been previous anouncements from other companies of microgrids which seem to aim for close to the same market, and it is not yet clear how the Powerwall might stack up against these competitors.

The first Tesla Energy product is 'Powerwall Home Battery,' a stationary battery that can power a household without requiring the grid. The battery is rechargeable lithium-ion — it uses Tesla's existing battery tech — and can be fixed to a wall, removing much of the existing complexity around using a local power source.

"The issue with existing batteries is that they suck," Musk said in a press conference announcing Tesla Energy. "They are expensive, unreliable and bad in every way."

Tesla's solution, he said, is different.

For one thing, the company's batteries cost $3,500 for 10kWh and $3,000 for 7kWh — add your snarky Apple Watch price comparison here. They are open for pre-orders in the U.S. now; the first orders will be dispatched "in late summer."

Like regular batteries, they can be used together — up to nine can be stacked up together to create a strong and reliable power source. Musk said he believes they can help people in emerging markets or remote locations 'leapfrog' the need for existing power systems, in a similar way that mobile phones have become more important than landlines in remote parts of the world.

microtodd says: Hook it up to some solar panels and you could be 100% off the grid. I know products like this already exist but maybe this is the step from a hobbyist market to a Home Depot consumerist market. I bet some Soylenters out there have already DIYd this themselves at home. Does this look feasible and interesting?

Too bad it's basically illegal to live off the grid.

CoolHand says: Obviously, modern civilization is not yet fully prepared for the post-fossil fuel era, but news like this can at least give some hope that there are people out there working to prepare us, and in that way, we may be just a little bit closer to being ready.

 
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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 01 2015, @07:28PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 01 2015, @07:28PM (#177572)

    > For standby power this doesn't do it. That same 3500USD at your local big box store will get you a Gnerac 10KW natural gas or propane unit.

    The generac also requires maintenance every 200 hours of operation. It is a back-up generator not intended for daily use.
    It is also noisy as hell.

    Furthermore the cost of operation is off the charts, 24 hour usage can easily exceed $50/day in fuel costs. Lets be ultra-generous and say $20/day. That's $600/month. If you live in a place where you have a $600/month electric bill (like SoCal, where I live) then you also have access to time-of-day pricing where off-peak is half to a third of peak pricing which would make Tesla's battery ideal.

    You are comparing apples to oranges, or as the other AC alluded to, apples to cherries.

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