Rolfe
Adult human female
Get an MG4 then!
I have a hard time seeing how they get the deer home on a back unless they leave most of it in the forest.It's true. I'm not much into hunting. But I can see why the ebikes makes it easier
I haven't done it or gone with them when they go hunting. But I do know they do it.I have a hard time seeing how they get the deer home on a back unless they leave most of it in the forest.
Small two wheeled carcass trailer, lighter duty version than the ones they already use for quads.I haven't done it or gone with them when they go hunting. But I do know they do it.
There are industrial and remote areas where diesel will be the best option for a long time to come.
Remote logging, short term mining and drilling operations like water wells come to mind. Areas where the infrastructure required for E or whatever wouldn't be required after the job.
It is easier for first world nations to have a portable solution brought on site for recharge.
Driving in a truckload of diesel has worked for every military or construction crew for 90 years. A simple solution to a problem. Job done and no specialized equipment brought in.
Contractors in Mexico will subcontract local businesses in the area to get heavy equipment on site rather than move thier own across five states for a two month job.
They have no incentives to invest in all new cutting edge sustainable fuel equipment beyond biodiesel.
Moving and maintaining a full fleet of alternative fuel equipment plus a crew is much more costly. Just moving in on site an office and a small management team for the job is much more profitable.
Money talks, it drives all decisions. Make alternative fuels cheaper than the current business model.
The best option might be to not cut down those trees.There are industrial and remote areas where diesel will be the best option for a long time to come.
Remote logging...
And before that steam engines did the job. Most of New Zealand's native forest wasDriving in a truckload of diesel has worked for every military or construction crew for 90 years. A simple solution to a problem. Job done and no specialized equipment brought in.
Would it still be more profitable if diesel was 5 times the price? That's what it should be to pay for scrubbing the CO2 it produces out of the atmosphere. Contractors are making a profit because externalities aren't accounted for. They are effectively stealing from us because we have to pay for the damage they are doing.Contractors in Mexico will subcontract local businesses in the area to get heavy equipment on site rather than move thier own across five states for a two month job.
They have no incentives to invest in all new cutting edge sustainable fuel equipment beyond biodiesel.
Moving and maintaining a full fleet of alternative fuel equipment plus a crew is much more costly. Just moving in on site an office and a small management team for the job is much more profitable.
The world’s first fully electric logging truck, equipped with a working crane, is now on road- with the multi-year Swedish project a major step towards decarbonising the carbon-intensive forest-to-terminal transport process... the new truck follows in the footsteps of an earlier model that has, for two years, successfully hauled logs between a terminal and SCA’s Obbola paper mill... the new 80-tonne vehicle has been rolled out after years of collaboration between Scania, one of the world’s leading truck and bus manufacturers, and SCA, Europe’s largest private logging company – which is now pushing to make the total supply chain for timber products fossil-free.
But businesses are run by people, who don't always make the best decisions. Often they avoid change even though it would make the business more profitable, because change means stress and uncertainty. Their current system is working OK so why take a risk? Money often doesn't talk loud enough.Money talks, it drives all decisions. Make alternative fuels cheaper than the current business model.
More like 40 to 100 years. I live in Weyerhauser territory in Washington State. Half the people I know around here work in the forests or the mills. Most common timber grown for lumber is douglas fir and western hemlock. But they also grow different varieties of cedar, pine, spruce and alder. Almost no timber younger than 40 years is harvested.RogerR, trees have a limited healthy lifespan in 2nd growth forests. Harvesting them is just like a crop on a farm.
It's just a 20 year cycle as opposed to yearly. Near all of them are managed very carefully.
Be careful which denier you quote.Solar tends to hit limits in overcast areas, dusty , snow or winter conditions. Extreme cold also affects a solar array.
A generator can be at 100% output charging day or night in most any conditions. Its also smaller to move onto the site. No company would risk weather related reasons shutting down equipment.
College student idealism vs contract deadlines and profit margins has a clear winner. At least right now.
Solar technology has a ways to go to meet some demands. Right now stationary arrays are huge if they meet big demands.
I quote no one. Deniers or otherwise.Be careful which denier you quote.
Cold does 'affect' solar panels, it makes them work better.
Overheating makes panels less efficient.
I have to kind of refute this. Snow, overcast skies, dust or anything that obstructs light negatively affects electricity generation. What really doesn't is extreme cold.Solar tends to hit limits in overcast areas, dusty , snow or winter conditions. Extreme cold also affects a solar array.
There are limits to solar. But I'm afraid you have exaggerated them. I live off grid. I generate all the electricity I need and then some nine to ten months of the year with solar. And I live in Western Washington where cloudy and overcast skies are common, particularly in the winter.A generator can be at 100% output charging day or night in most any conditions. Its also smaller to move onto the site. No company would risk weather related reasons shutting down equipment.
College student idealism vs contract deadlines and profit margins has a clear winner. At least right now.
Solar technology has a ways to go to meet some demands. Right now stationary arrays are huge if they meet big demands.