And we'd be breaking our backs trying to pay at the grocery store!chrismb wrote:...If it were otherwise, then one pound's weight of sterling silver would still be worth 'One pound sterling' and we'd never have seen a world financial crisis.

You've clearly been believing all that the tokamak-crowd has been preaching!MSimon wrote: But the problems are not primarily physics problems for ITER. Other than ELMs etc. they are engineering problems. Physics may be used to solve them (you would be surprised at how much engineers use physics) but they are not physics problems. They are engineering problems.
I would say there are working prototypes, none that reach q=1 though.MSimon wrote:
ELMs? ITER? There are no working prototypes of any fusion device.
Of course Polywell has its loss problem. And B11 is a proposal at this stage. No tests.
Still. Today - I'd put more money on Polywell delivering economical power to the grid than toks.
Not enough published neutrons for confidence.chrismb wrote:Are you supporting my statement, or trying to contest it?MSimon wrote:ELMs? ITER? There are no working prototypes of any fusion device.chrismb wrote: Don't be daft! Show me the working prototype that shows the physics is nailed down!!!...
Accountants and buyers have always been my friends on any engineering project. I have never considered them an impediment.chrismb wrote:I think most engineers are so because they like to turn dreams into a physical reality. But they are generally prevented because they are employed by a class of people who are predominantly accountants.gblaze42 wrote: Engineers are the realists. If we we're to just revel in the scientific pursuit of knowledge and not worry about the cost, why don't we pursue making antimatter via particle accelerators? it's easier than fusion, since we can already do it.
Could it be the cost that prevents us?
If fusion were to costly to produce a working power plant, there would little point in going for that as well.
I'm not picking on your response particularly, but this whole thread makes me really angry because money is the EXCHANGE MEDIUM, it is not THE THING BEING EXCHANGED. It is such a fundamentally mis-conceived notion of our modern age that it's got our Governments making preposterous statements that our financial centres are 'wealth-creators'. They might be 'wealthy-people creators' but the only points of wealth creation are mining, farming, and production engineering. The more you do of any of those, the more wealth you create.
People have become brain-washed slaves to the idea that money is King. Money is the representation of captial and therefore cannot be King - it is a figment of the accountant's creativeness.
Build a 20GW fusion reactor and it will 'cause' money to flow as it is a piece of capital. C'mon engineers!! We CAN sieze back humanity from the accountants - it is only in recent times that 'international money', as we know it, was invented. If it were otherwise, then one pound's weight of sterling silver would still be worth 'One pound sterling' and we'd never have seen a world financial crisis.
So complete is the brain-washing by the financial institutions of our day (that seek and demand your fealty) that you actually think that [your sentiment] is true.MSimon wrote:
Accountants and buyers have always been my friends on any engineering project. I have never considered them an impediment.
Cost is part of the engineering equation.
Give me $40 trillion this year and I can guarantee you 20 GW of continuous fusion power in less than 5 years. Of course we might do much better on a $/w basis with windmills and batteries. The way around that is to kill the accountants and buyers.
Costs are meaningless any way. Every one knows costs are just the evil capitalists ways of denying humanity what it really needs. Just ask the folks running the USSR. If you can find it or them.
Yes. If you build a $40 trillion fusion reactor that produces power at the cost of $1 million a KWh the world will be beating a path to your door. With 60 ft of good hemp rope and directions to the nearest suitable lamp post.
I would say predominantly business oriented, true, but then who else is going to make it happen? Governments? Well we're still waiting on that to happen.chrismb wrote: I think most engineers are so because they like to turn dreams into a physical reality. But they are generally prevented because they are employed by a class of people who are predominantly accountants.
I agree with you mostly. Money is more than an exchange medium, it's a great equalizer as well, allowing wealth to be brought to more people than those who own land, or buildings. It also allows for people to gain wealth from ones abilities.I'm not picking on your response particularly, but this whole thread makes me really angry because money is the EXCHANGE MEDIUM, it is not THE THING BEING EXCHANGED. It is such a fundamentally mis-conceived notion of our modern age that it's got our Governments making preposterous statements that our financial centres are 'wealth-creators'. They might be 'wealthy-people creators' but the only points of wealth creation are mining, farming, and production engineering. The more you do of any of those, the more wealth you create.
Well to a degree yes but some people who actually are wealthy know money is just a tool. And oddly enough it's because of that distinction that they are wealthy.People have become brain-washed slaves to the idea that money is King. Money is the representation of captial and therefore cannot be King - it is a figment of the accountant's creativeness.
Build a 20GW fusion reactor and it will 'cause' money to flow as it is a piece of capital. .
That's what happens when we got off the Gold standard.C'mon engineers!! We CAN sieze back humanity from the accountants - it is only in recent times that 'international money', as we know it, was invented. If it were otherwise, then one pound's weight of sterling silver would still be worth 'One pound sterling' and we'd never have seen a world financial crisis
Go outside on a cloudless day and look toward the bright part of the sky. Don't look too long, you'll burn out your eyes looking at what you aren't sure exists.chrismb wrote:By no means is that true. We're talking about 'controlled' fusion, and there is no indication yet that a solution exists.KitemanSA wrote: Everyone agrees that (fusion) exists
Not to take away from your point, which I happen to agree with, but I wouldn't bet on you is this case. I am not sure that you could constructively spend 40 trillion dollars in 5 years. I am also unsure that 40 trillion dollars would get you a 20 GW output fusion power plant in ten years. While I am hopeful that polywell and some other fusion approaches MAY lead to profitable fusion, that does make it so. The problem may not be sovable at our current tech level. I am hoping otherwise, of course.MSimon wrote:Give me $40 trillion this year and I can guarantee you 20 GW of continuous fusion power in less than 5 years. Of course we might do much better on a $/w basis with windmills and batteries. The way around that is to kill the accountants and buyers.
Please note, he didn't say one 20GW plant, nor did he say net 20GW. I'm pretty sure he could get close by building a whole series of smaller toks that use 200GW to produce 20GW.pfrit wrote:Not to take away from your point, which I happen to agree with, but I wouldn't bet on you is this case. I am not sure that you could constructively spend 40 trillion dollars in 5 years. I am also unsure that 40 trillion dollars would get you a 20 GW output fusion power plant in ten years. While I am hopeful that polywell and some other fusion approaches MAY lead to profitable fusion, that does make it so. The problem may not be sovable at our current tech level. I am hoping otherwise, of course.MSimon wrote:Give me $40 trillion this year and I can guarantee you 20 GW of continuous fusion power in less than 5 years. Of course we might do much better on a $/w basis with windmills and batteries. The way around that is to kill the accountants and buyers.
Show me the controls!KitemanSA wrote:Go outside on a cloudless day and look toward the bright part of the sky. Don't look too long, you'll burn out your eyes looking at what you aren't sure exists.chrismb wrote:By no means is that true. We're talking about 'controlled' fusion, and there is no indication yet that a solution exists.KitemanSA wrote: Everyone agrees that (fusion) exists
By analogy, the bottling is the controling. We are looking for a way to bottle it at a profit.
I guess that might have been the response 2000 years ago if I'd suggested we could escape planet earth. 'Financing' only arose a few centuries ago from the 'need' to fund wars whilst not actually having the cash to do it.TallDave wrote:Seriously dude, you need to get out more. You've wandered deep into tinfoil-hat territory.So complete is the brain-washing by the financial institutions of our day (that seek and demand your fealty) that you actually think that [your sentiment] is true.