This thread is inspired by another: view original post
Just gonna tl;dr this shit since this needs to get cleared up, fast.
-Each tile costs roughly $3,000 per square foot, not including cost of maintenance and installation (holy shit that's a lot!)
-Roads are not an ideal surface for solar panels because they are frequently covered by cars, dirt, oil, water, etc
-Glass is unsuitable to drive on
-The government would need to buy a separate power line system (cannot be simply "plugged into" existing power lines)
-Solar panels are optimally angled towards the sun, not straight up
-The issue with solar isn't the lack of space to put panels (they go very well on roofs, parking cover, etc.), it's the current cost of producing and maintaining panels vs. the value of the energy they generate
Watch the video for some more. Solar roadways were never going to happen. Maybe next time you guys will use a bit more scrutiny after watching a video with a caricatured person saying "whoooaaa" liked a stoned dumbass, or telling you that the world is going to look like Tron.
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Edited by Bolt: 6/4/2014 2:44:27 AMI'm really glad someone made this. Anyone who thought this was viable knows nothing about how solar panels work, which is fine, but sad when you consider those people were willing to part with over a million dollars. I haven't finished the video yet, but I hope they bring up the chemical waste solar panels produce when made. Pro-tip for avoiding getting bamboozled: the oil industry has always promoted solar power, because they [i]do[/i] know the engineering behind it, and they know it will never be a threat to them. Now sit back and relax while we show you misleading graphics about why Fukushima has killed us all twice, but don't get so scared that you turn off the tv before watching the oil company's 30 ads in as many minutes for "GREEN GREEN GREEN."