The 50 States of Solar: States Eye Grid Access Fees, Time-Varying Rates, and Storage in Net Metering Successor Tariff Design During 2021 - NC Clean Energy Technology Center
now that i have ordered a bolt, it's time to start researching solar panels. I read the entire thread, good information, thanks to everyone! our home is about 2,800. square feet. we just removed two massive norway maples in the front yard last year due to rot, so the roof is now fairly sunny, although there are tall pines on the eastern property line (not mine) and mixed woods across the street. it's a cape style with two doghouse dormers on the front, and a nearly flat roofed full shed dormer on the rear. the roof is 19 years old and in good condition, but i think i'd like to replace it before the solar install. we also have a kohler 12kw propane backup generator with transfer switch. our yearly usage was 7,900 kwh in 2022, and the cost was $3,225. for the year. peak usage due to a/c was around 1,300 kwh in july. we are on a well for domestic water. heat is by oil, and dryer and gas fireplace by propane. there are just two of us in the house except for occasional overnight visitors. i just signed up with energy sage for a solar audit, and competing installers. mass is a net metering state, but idk how much they pay per kwh against our 40 cent cost. i would appreciate any and all advise regarding technology, warranty and purchasing. we can buy outright, finance or lease. thanks all!
Our system was SunPower, both inverters & panels. (8kW) Although modernly they might have Micro inverters on the back side which makes for much easier additions. In any event they've been Numero Uno for many years and I'm still made in the USA iirc. We too paid cash. Zeroing out our home electric use & 2 plug in cars basically amortized theirselves over roughly 6 years. Whatever you do - do NOT do a lease ... as the owners of panels have a lean on your property and that really creeps out perspective buyers. we say that from experience having brokered millions in real estate . .
Thanks Hill! Sunpower sounds great, and I will look over any lease terms carefully, I wouldnโt want that either.
Just make sure you get two storage batteries. It makes everything worth it. You can run off storage overnight.
I just got a preliminary quote from sunpower, $25,000. After tax credits For 10 Kw. Break even at 10 years. Hmm, Iโm 68, not sure how long weโll be here.
They both show the same satellite shot of the house with exact same panel locations. Must be a program. I suspect when they do a site survey, the pine trees will be an issue
I'm starting to get some numbers from my guy. Talking around $40k for a 10kW system with an oversized hybrid inverter (can handle more panels later without changing inverter, can add battery storage later without changing inverter) I'm really liking the idea overall. I think I need to combine the project with adding new minisplits to part of the house and use one loan for both improvements. Should be some juicy tax breaks out of both later.
I was offered micro inverters. I see a lot to like about them. But one thing I don't like is the difficulty of adding battery storage later, and we lose mains power often enough that this is of interest. So my electrician suggested putting in a large hybrid inverter that would maintain and make use of a battery bank to be installed in the future. The unit would be overspec'd enough to allow me to hang more panels later, as well. You've already got an automatic standby power system with your generator, so you're probably better off using the benefits of the micro-inverters and rolling coal (sorry) when the mains go out.
yeah, the gen is only a few years old, and we don't lose power as much or as long as we used to, so it would be pointless to replace it in the near future unless i could make a profit on the powerwall.
I don't know about a powerwall, but lots of batteries are going to get more common and less expensive. So my eventual battery is likely to be cheaper than any option that exists today.
Absolutely replace the roof before or with the solar install! At least, if you plan to still be in this house when the roof needs replacement, or don't want any pushback from future buyers concerned about roof condition beneath that solar system. I don't think it makes any sense to put a long-lived solar system on top of a roof with significantly shorter life expectancy. It will cost a lot in labor to pull up any solar before roof replacement, and re-install it after. That is where metal roofing starts making a lot of sense. Supposedly, if you do the solar and roof replacement together, the federal solar tax credit applies to the cost of the roof portion of the project too. Though check with a tax expert to verify this, don't rely on my word. The current Inflation Reduction Act may have changed things. Tesla Powerwall is supposed to work with at least some (Tesla only??) microinverters. Similar, Enphase IQ battery systems are supposed to work with current and some legacy Enphase microinverter models, including mine (with a firmware re-flash). I used microinverters because of significant and varying tree shade interference, and so that I could easily expand my system piecemeal (in 3 groups so far). Later I did learn of per-module 'optimizers' that supposedly could allow string-type inverters to handle the variable tree shade issue with similar efficiency. Without such devices, one dark or shaded panel seriously and disproportionately degrades the output of the entire string of panels.
Fascinating. I was looking to put my panels out in the yard because I have too much of it and figured it would be nice to mow less. On the other hand my roof doesn't have that much life left in it. The thought of combining the jobs for a combined savings... I feel positively motivated to avoid anything with the Tesla name on it at this point. Thanks, got some more reading to do. It's been tough to guess the "stretch factor" for future expansion, because I know once we have free power we'll find more uses for it...