Canadian_Infidel

Canadian_Infidel t1_ixvaovq wrote

Your dryer is the most power hungry thing in your home. Homes run them a few hours a week, maybe. Now it will be 8 hours a day or more.

The lines that feed the neighborhood are based on how much power will be likely used for all the homes at any time. It isnt sized so every house could use max power at all times.

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Canadian_Infidel t1_ixt6t2f wrote

I work on them for a living. You either double the current or double the voltage, if you want to double the power. Doubling current means the copper carrying the energy has to be twice as thick. And they can't step up the voltage much more at local levels, usually not at all.

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Canadian_Infidel t1_ixs38ta wrote

Those are not the transformers in question. Those are plentiful. The larger ones are all custom and are so critical and have such incredible lead times (years) the US military started keeping copies of them all since they would be such an easy military target.

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Canadian_Infidel t1_ixs2p6x wrote

Really? When I was in school 15 years ago they said our grid was originally designed with tons of redundancy but it was all stripped away and we are now at about 104% capacity. This is Canada.

I don't think normal people have a very good grasp on what a megawatt is, or what a kilowatt is, or a horsepower, or anything like that at all.

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Canadian_Infidel t1_ixs2f22 wrote

Going full throttle. 2500 hp is very large for an electric motor. We had a 5000 hp one where I worked and it was a 10k bill PER START plus running energy.

Also cars are very powerful. Your home uses maybe 10-12 hp, max. With the dryer and stove going. Absolute max.

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