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TravO

12/29/17 12:00 PM

#37865 RE: Khale #37864

Well said

rhyminrhymin

12/29/17 12:01 PM

#37866 RE: Khale #37864

ASTI will fail, Energizer will keep on ticking and simply find a different supplier for solar toy components.

ASTI makes nothing special that cannot be obtained from numerous other suppliers

Khale

12/29/17 12:07 PM

#37867 RE: Khale #37864

Meanwhile, I am yet to be convinced that the solar arrays on the Lockheed Martin's LM2100 satellite are not from Ascent Solar (in spite of what the critics say). Did anyone bother to connect the dots between Ascent’s December 4 news release about JAXA, and Lockheed Martin's October news about LM2100. …The panels supplied to JAXA are 0.001 inches thick which is half the thickness of Ascent’s standard product. It means Ascent standard panels are 0.002 inches thick. Viola, the panels on LM2100 are 0.002 inches thick. Do we know of any other company that has the patent to produce panels that are 0.002 inches thick on polyimide substrate? Please convince me that this is not another one of those activities going on behind the scene.

On Lockheed Martin's LM2100 news
optics.org/news/8/10/7


…In raw numbers, the MMA’s compact flexible array design delivers 50 percent more power than previous rigid array designs at a 30 percent lower mass.
…Typical rigid panels range from 0.75 to 1.5 in (18 to 36 mm) thick, but the MM Array’s synthetic polymer material is just 0.002 inches (0.05 mm) thick, a significant reduction.

...Lockheed Martin has leveraged expertise from across Space Systems to contribute to the design.


Ascent’s Superlight Thin-Film Solar Selected for Jupiter Deployment Demonstration by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
Dec 04, 2017


…In this most recent purchase, JAXA placed the entire order, comprising of small area test cells and large, 19.5cm x 30cm monolithically-integrated modules, all on a very thin, 25 micron (0.001 inch) plastic substrate which is half the thickness of Ascent’s production substrate for standard product.

jayoperator

12/31/17 1:03 PM

#37885 RE: Khale #37864

BINGO!

Khale:"Energizer would have done all its due diligence and also considered other solar companies before deciding to go with Ascent"

Does this sound familiar?

Mike Knee: Senior VP Sales and Marketing- Energizer - Solar

Our success relies on:

"Made in the USA solar technology that is flexible, can be damaged and still provide power for emergency access and for charging devices anywhere. You can shoot a hole in this panel or deeply scratch it and it will still work."

https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-knee-8a514a6/