Updated

practical logo.bmpPractical Instruments has raised $8 million in a first round of funding to develop what it says is the most powerful solar “concentration” technology yet.

It uses solar panels that track the sun as it moves. The panels use mirrors to concentrate the sunlight for the photovoltaic process, thereby boosting performance.

It is the latest in a wave of entrants in the booming solar power industry, and will compete against a number of other “concentration” companies, including Energy Innovations, SolFocus and Solaria. It will be presenting its technology at the Solar Power 2006 expo in San Jose this week. (See summary of the solar wave in the Mercury News today.)

RockPort Capital Partners and Nth Power led the venture capital round. Trinity Ventures and Rincon Venture Partners also participated.

The wave of solar funding joins a wider boom in alternative energy investments: In just the last few days, we’ve seen solar monitoring start-up Fat Spaniel, power management company iWatt, biofuel start-up Primafuel (Long Beach, Calif.) and biofuel start-up Amyris all raise new financing.

Practical Instruments chief executive Brad Hines said he is taking a different tack than the other solar competitors. Two years ago, Hines left competitor Energy Innovations, which users a similar tracking technology. But that technology was early and the panels required “tower” and other support structures that created panels different to those the industry was familiar with, Hines said. As a result, the company struggled to create what is effectively its own distribution channel. While Energy Innovations boasted a good concentration technology, installers didn’t know what to do with it, he said. (We wrote about Energy Innovations here last year, when it raised venture capital. We contacted Energy Innovations President Andrew Beebe for a response to Hines’ critique; he declined comment).

practical instruments.bmpSo Hines, who was also a “chief architect” at NASA, founded Practical Instruments (see team in picture) with the goal of making panels that are the same shape as regular solar panels. He also pledges they will cost less and produce more power. The company’s panels can produce 30 percent more power for a given area than the current leaders, he says. However, the company hasn’t started delivering its product or set pricing yet, so we’ll see if he pulls this off.

The company’s technology resides on the rooftop, and so can be installed on more buildings than, say SolFocus, which requires a ground mounting and is more focused on serving utilities, he said.

Solaria, another company we’ve written about, has raised money for panels with concentration technology — but its technology does not use tracking, and so it’s limited to only two to three times the regular concentration of sunlight on the solar cells. Practical Instruments see concentration levels of about ten times regular concentration.

The investment will fund the production of Practical Instruments’ flagship product, Heliotube, the company said.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,
Trackback URL

3 Trackbacks

  1. VentureBeat » Google builds largest solar installation in U.S. — oh, and bigger than Microsoft’s said:

    [...] The contract win by Energy Innovations follows an announcement today by a competing southern California firm, Practical Instruments, that it had raised $8 million in venture backing. That company’s founder, Gary Hines, said he left Energy Innovations two years ago because it was having difficulty selling its unconventionally shaped panels. (Installers are used to the plat panel shapes produced by the likes of Sharp, SolarPower and others — the type you see in images here). [...]

  2. VentureBeat Wire » Practical Instruments gets $8M for new solar tech said:

    [...] See our story here. VentureBeat Community [...]

  3. VentureBeat Wire » Energy Innovations loses another employee, despite Google solar deal said:

    [...] But based on Harris’ comments, about being an entrepreneur, and the fact that he’d served out his one-year contract at EI after the company bought his previous company, this may be quite understandable. Add to that the massive opportunity afforded to entrepreneurs in this area — given all the hungry venture capital being invested into solar companies — you’d expect this sort of thing to happen. Another employee, Brad Hines, also left EI two years ago, to start Practical Instruments, saying he could produce technology that fit better with industry standards. VentureBeat Community [...]

6 Comments

  1. Jerry Calsetta said:

    I owen a plumbing & heating bussiness in Vermont, with a growing interst in solar allternitives in this state it would be advantages to investicate new alturnatives.

  2. Gold said:

    Hi there, This is a pretty cool blog on Practical Instruments joins solar gold rush, raises $8M! Thanks a lot and have fun!

  3. "Harley" Russ Biermann said:

    The articles are interesting ,informative and have struck an interest for me once I have finished the project at hand.To which I am seeking financing and partners for,on the table currently is a perpetual, alternate, hydrocarbon fuel;oily cellulose fiber is it`s base.I am at production of the second manual prototype which will allow us end result production.And a by-product end result of seven marketable commodities,leaving zero footprint. The after the fact storage of photovoltaic,solar power, generated through water to steam to turbine interest me greatly,as I have a way to store the power for use when the sun is not predominant.As well I am researching enzyme technologies for gaseous by-product production. Youre`s Truly “Harley”

  4. aloise said:

    what instruments did the gold rush play?!!!!!!!!! plz answer the question i need it for homework pretty plz luv ya bye and answer it and sent it in my mail.!!!!!!!!!??????……….plz!!!!!!PLZ>>>PRETTY PLZ PLZ PLZ thanks alot bye

  5. San Jose Plumbing said:

    8 million is quite the fund. I don’t think solar energy is really the best alternative energy source we could be exploring. Just because the sun isn’t up for about 8 hours every day. I don’t care how much it can store.

  6. wheres mario? said:

    what do you mean when you say, just because the sun isnt up for about 8 hours everyday? that doesnt make sense, solar energy is a really good alternative

Add a Comment