Yeah, supply chain issues since COVID have been a problem for everyone. Helion was unfortunately no exception. Building manufacturing lines and perfecting them takes time (see the "manufacturing hell" of Elon Musk and Tesla). And even when you build your capacitors (e.g.) in house, you still need supplies for those as well. I think that what essentially amounts to a few months delay for a first of a kind machine is not a big deal, all things considered and with the lessons learned and manufacturing lines built, they can now build future machines faster. So, it is not that easy to quantify the net loss of time. We will see how quickly they can ramp up Polaris operations. I would assume that they will need at least a couple of months to fine tune the machine. Assuming that they get the machine built by mid October (which I would assume is a NET date), then it is possible, but IMHO unlikely that they will be able to any net electricity shots this year (though maybe, just maybe there is some sort of Christmas miracle). Most realistically, I would put the first net electricity attempt into April of 2025.mvanwink5 wrote: ↑Sat Aug 17, 2024 5:34 pmSince that target Helion learned their machine needed to be larger in diameter & they had some logistics issues (I believe unspecified), so their schedule shifted to full assembly in 2024 & early 2025 for net electric. I still am in hope for early news. LOL
The big question for me is: If/when they achieve net electricity, given their secrecy, when will the general public hear about it? I think the first indicator could be an influx of funding (the 1.7 billion already committed). But all of this is pure speculation on my part. So, take it with a huge grain of salt.