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The Kola Superdeep Borehole reached temperatures of 500 degrees at the bottom. If you could dig down to where the temperature reaches just over 212 degrees, would you be able to run a steam engine by putting water in the hole and letting it boil to create steam to power the engine. As long as the heat remained the same and was able to properly run the steam engine, it would seem like a very renewable energy source as the water could be collected and dumped back down the hole to repeat the process indefinitely.

Kola Superdeep Borehole, https://archive.is/0zuzE Steam engines, https://www.mpoweruk.com/steam_turbines.htm

The Kola Superdeep Borehole reached temperatures of 500 degrees at the bottom. If you could dig down to where the temperature reaches just over 212 degrees, would you be able to run a steam engine by putting water in the hole and letting it boil to create steam to power the engine. As long as the heat remained the same and was able to properly run the steam engine, it would seem like a very renewable energy source as the water could be collected and dumped back down the hole to repeat the process indefinitely. Kola Superdeep Borehole, https://archive.is/0zuzE Steam engines, https://www.mpoweruk.com/steam_turbines.htm

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[–] 1 pt (edited )

You need to think about many factors and the scale of them, drilling a 10m hole is one thing, drilling a 100m hole is a much more expensive and difficult problem to tackle, then you would need to do this for every home, have turbines and electrical equipment for each, and provide parts and maintenance.

The better approach is to change the scale and produce much more power at central locations and distribute the power which is done in many parts of the world.

Is it possible? Yes. Is it reasonable and affordable for every location? No.

[–] 1 pt

Tesla vs. Edison power models.

I think we need to transition to Teslas vision

[–] 0 pt (edited )

That is honestly a pretty retarded take on it. We are talking about huge turbines and having to drill deep deep into the earth for the remote chance at using it to generate electricity if not in a "hot zone".

If you want to generate your own private grid geothermal electrical power in a remote location you will either need to fund millions of dollars of drilling and equipment (and transportation), or pick other more available sources for power depending on the location.

[–] 1 pt

Did you assume putting turbines down bottom of wells rather than simply creating a temperature differential that reaches a small surface turbine? Did you not know about thermal conductivity?

That's retarded.

FYI the philosophy behind my comment. Which you do easily dismissed. Is about the need for distributed production of electricity vs. Concentrated production.

And its happening right now