Itsmoked, I see your point. When I originally thought of this, I was simply concerned about extending the life of the battery and did not think about the details: I was more engrossed in other logistics, since solar panels can run like hell for 30+ years and have no problem, whereas battery life has a direct correllation to usage (Hence solar plants hardly ever need to replace a module in the array but car batteries are often changed because the cathode/anode chemicals no longer work right due to "boiling" degradation).
However, now that you have mentioned it, connecting the circuit to have subsequent solar-->battery-->motor presents a very safe alternative, since doing that eliminates the problem of having a sensor/mechanism that would switch the motor power supply to the battery whenever the panels provided too little power. Now that I think about it, the wiring will be a bit simpler. But again, I was concerned with extending battery life.
In addition, I understand your constant reminders of the puny power of current solar panels. I admit it too, they're just not up to par right now. But what about 5, 10 years down the road? Maybe then the solar panels in this scenario could provide so much more power, to the point that even though the motor sucks titanic amounts of power from the battery (or batteries, for that matter) the solar panels will produce enough to charge up the battery. By this I mean that power going into the battery will be greater than power going out of the battery. I'm willing to wait, though. But I digress.
Let me get your nuke/storage explanation straight for the last time:
The nuke (or a hydroplant) differs from a solar panel simply because there will never be a chance for the solar cells to produce excess power to put in storage.
Just checking. This seems to be what you're saying in
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"Specifically in your case the solar can never supply the motor on its own and the process of shifting from the solar/battery/motor is a different process than the nuke/city/pumped storage."
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Now that I think about it, they do involve different processes. Hydros/nukes are chiefly turbine-based using heat, so they can easily switched to pump water to storage whenever there is excess power. Solar panels involve pure electrical power transfers. However, it still looks like they still share the same concept, even though the solar power idea is more complicated.
Give me a thumbs up or down so I can be sure. Itsmoked, thanks a lot for your posts. You have solved quite a problem.