Car thieves will steal those batteries in less than 9 minutes.
Don't park one of those cars with $6,000 in silver in the battery at Bush Int Airport in Houston and leave it in long term parking lot for a week. For that matter, every thief in town will want that silver battery.
Last I heard from grounded sources, the battery tech is not yet fully matured. Prototypes do exist, and the tech is very promising. However, it still has many challenges before it can actually make it to market like, high production costs, and difficulties related to upscaling production, to name a few. Not trying to doom on the tech, just presenting insights I have read about from other recent sources. This tech is certainly well worth keeping an eye on.
So how does the silver in this battery get "messy"? I'm sure that's not the technical term, but do they mean it's difficult to extract? ...or that the silver permeates other parts of the battery making it economically unfeasible to extract it?
Where can one buy silver? And, realistically, is it worth it if they can only buy one or two ounces? Or is this like most things and it's only worth it if you can invest thousands, and only really if you invested back when it was cheaper instead of now?
If you cant mine enough silver, fast enough to produce it - so it means nothing, yet. More importantly I think a thief would find a quick method. Necessity is the mother of invention after all.
Car thieves will steal those batteries in less than 9 minutes.
Don't park one of those cars with $6,000 in silver in the battery at Bush Int Airport in Houston and leave it in long term parking lot for a week. For that matter, every thief in town will want that silver battery.
You know it...
It's a big battery,with small amounts of silver in each smaller battery,sort of like they do now.
Last I heard from grounded sources, the battery tech is not yet fully matured. Prototypes do exist, and the tech is very promising. However, it still has many challenges before it can actually make it to market like, high production costs, and difficulties related to upscaling production, to name a few. Not trying to doom on the tech, just presenting insights I have read about from other recent sources. This tech is certainly well worth keeping an eye on.
They can recover it. Just like they recove the lead from regular car batteries.
The key thing here is that the battery's don't melt down like current batteries,silver is much much safer.
So this will drive up the price of silver moar?
Yes. They already have a test plant built in korea,and batteries tested,and Samsung has purchased all the production of a silver mine in Mexico.....
Buy silver mining stocks.
Wow...to be expected..
They should be using graphene from hemp.
This is a waste of the medical miracle that is silver.
u/#peperee
I can't access that link. How is silver a medical miracle?
Silver is anti fungal, bacterial, viral.
Ah, did NOT know that.
It wasn't a link, just bolded text. Check out colloidal silver.
So how does the silver in this battery get "messy"? I'm sure that's not the technical term, but do they mean it's difficult to extract? ...or that the silver permeates other parts of the battery making it economically unfeasible to extract it?
Will need to dig moar...
Dont worry it will be more economical at 1000 dollars an ounce.
Where can one buy silver? And, realistically, is it worth it if they can only buy one or two ounces? Or is this like most things and it's only worth it if you can invest thousands, and only really if you invested back when it was cheaper instead of now?
JM Bullion, buy silver coins. Is it still worth buying? Yeah, it's still likely to at least double in value from where it is now.
Dont be afraid of junk silver. Learn how it works. 1.40 of any denominations of 90 percent silver is 1 oz.
Dimes, quarters, half dollars, dollars. No nickels. Recognizeable. Already fractuonal and a dime today is worth over 5 dollars in silver.
Funny how they haven't actually shown one in a car...
https://nitter.net/VincentCrypt46/status/2004652374342992069?s=20
If you cant mine enough silver, fast enough to produce it - so it means nothing, yet. More importantly I think a thief would find a quick method. Necessity is the mother of invention after all.
Would it not be easier to just get a job