npstone
Member
I'm looking into having solar installed on my shop/garage roof, which is south facing and is open with no tree or other shading. I like the idea of producing some of my own electricity, offsetting/eliminating my electricity bill, and the tax credit is definitely a bonus. Two things came up when talking to the installer:
1) The house and the shop are on separate utility meters, and to get the metered offset, they have to be combined, otherwise any offset would only be applied to one or the other. Currently, my house electricity usage is about 3 times that of the shop (~$150/month average for the house, and ~$65/month average for the shop). Combining the two into one meter will cost a bit more, but nothing prohibitive, and my goal is to offset about 90%-95% of my total electricity use.
2) It turns out the shop has 3-phase power supplied to it. I had no idea. This is rural Montana, so no reason why I would have expected it there. There is no wiring for three phase equipment in the building, and it doesn't look like any had ever been hooked up. I don't expect to personally use any 3-phase equipment in the shop. I mainly use it for lighter duty vehicle maintenance, some wood work and some welding. It turns out that I'd need to add $2k-3k$ in additional equipment in order to address the 3-phase, combine the meters and add the solar.
So, I'm looking for some general thoughts on what to do. Solar installer suggested getting rid of the 3-phase and saving the money. Other option would be to keep it for potential future users, or even myself, and just have the solar cover the house electricity. Any thoughts?
1) The house and the shop are on separate utility meters, and to get the metered offset, they have to be combined, otherwise any offset would only be applied to one or the other. Currently, my house electricity usage is about 3 times that of the shop (~$150/month average for the house, and ~$65/month average for the shop). Combining the two into one meter will cost a bit more, but nothing prohibitive, and my goal is to offset about 90%-95% of my total electricity use.
2) It turns out the shop has 3-phase power supplied to it. I had no idea. This is rural Montana, so no reason why I would have expected it there. There is no wiring for three phase equipment in the building, and it doesn't look like any had ever been hooked up. I don't expect to personally use any 3-phase equipment in the shop. I mainly use it for lighter duty vehicle maintenance, some wood work and some welding. It turns out that I'd need to add $2k-3k$ in additional equipment in order to address the 3-phase, combine the meters and add the solar.
So, I'm looking for some general thoughts on what to do. Solar installer suggested getting rid of the 3-phase and saving the money. Other option would be to keep it for potential future users, or even myself, and just have the solar cover the house electricity. Any thoughts?

It isn't cheap but you'll have 3phase and can take it anywhere in the country with you should you ever move. That could be a potential selling point you could list, seriously. Its a $5k-10k investment depending on where you live. I get that if you never use the capability and have to pay an additional service charge monthly it isn't really helping.
