• reddig33@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Depends on your definition of “negligible” and “ready for use”.

    A lithium ion battery cell wears out over time. The more you charge and discharge it, the faster the wear. Look at a ten year old phone or laptop battery for example — it still holds a charge, but not as much.

    So if V2G is set to stop feeding when ten or twenty percent of the battery is depleted, I can see that being acceptable. But I don’t know that you’d get much money back from that. Maybe $1 at most. Especially with how stingy private power companies are about compensating power generation like rooftop solar.

    • Beacon@fedia.io
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      19 days ago

      Charging and discharging a lithium battery when it’s within the 20% to 80% level adds essentially no wear to the battery. Eg discharging from 40% down to 30% and then recharging it back to 40% basically does nothing to your battery

    • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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      19 days ago

      But I don’t know that you’d get much money back from that. Maybe $1 at most. Especially with how stingy private power companies are about compensating power generation like rooftop solar.

      That’s the main problem with the concept, that the incentives and infrastructure isn’t available. I doubt many people would have a problem with minor battery degradation if it had provided them an income stream for 5-10 years. Heck, you could replace the battery and leave the old one to continue feeding the grid.

      • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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        19 days ago

        Actually old electric car batteries are being reused for this purpose already. It’s a major reason why we don’t see more electric vehicle battery recycling, it’s because the majority of them haven’t gotten to the Recycled part of the reduce reuse recycle