Teken
Well-known member
I was not aware of this added benefit . . .



John,
If you do actually roll with this it would be most helpful if you could document the process and the up's and down's of your experience along with of course . . .
Lots of progress pictures etc . . .
Have you decided what sort of system you want?I have already determined that I want mine to be a combination of on grid, but have the ability to use the power during the evening as the primary source of power . . .
This in my mind covers all the bases for all: Reduces my hydro bill, supplies the POCO extra energy, gives me the redundancy of power when I require it to supplement the 21 kwh NG back up generator to reduce ever increasing gas costs etc . . .

my big peeve with solar, is without any subsidy it doesnt pencil out financially. You basically end up with taxpayers subsidizing people's electric bills. That money should be going to infrastructure, not to individuals (i see it as an illegal gift of public funds).
The heat pump is just like a dehumidifier, instead of hot air getting exhausted into your basement, they have a water jacket and water gets heated up. The moist air in your basement runs thru a cold coil, dew point and water drips out. I have mine high enough to have that water run right into my sewer, some use a condensate pump and pump it out doors or into the sewer. The heat pump doesn't run as much as a dehumidifier might but it takes some water out of the air. You get double duty for the same amount of electricity
You're using 10 kwh a day?![]()
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Yeah, I heat with wood, a few more sticks and I got hot water.If the space that the water heater is in is un-conditioned your fine, but if it is in a closet in a living area, the heat is collected from the surrounding area, which if heated will increase your heating bills, on the other hand if it is cooled, it will reduce the load on the a/c unit. Heat pump water heaters are not efficent for everybody, but are good in certain situations.
Could you provide us with the name of the solar panel vendor.
Almost 32K and change for a off grid system?Could you provide us with the name of the solar panel vendor.
Also, will you also be returning any unused power back to the grid to help offset future costs?![]()
I'm not sure yet who the panel vendor is, but the quote is from a local solar installation firm and seems to be less than others I have seen.
There will be no opportunity to sell back to the grid since I am building over 1Km from the nearest grid source. As I mentioned, it would cost me 35K to have a hydro hookup so the solar option is an alternative.
Do you feel that this price is too high?
Almost 32K and change for a off grid system?Could you provide us with the name of the solar panel vendor.
Also, will you also be returning any unused power back to the grid to help offset future costs?![]()
You gotta start pricing this stuff. Figure a very conservative price of $800 for a 200w panel, 6.5kW comes to around $26,000 in panels alone. Now add installation, mounting, inverters, batteries (for off-grid) and 32K starts to sound like a good price.
Payback - If I figure right at 6600 w/day = 2406kW per year. At 11.5 cents /kWh your payback on that is about 115 years.
your math is correct, but for the guy who was considering it -it pencils out because it was going to cost him 35K to get power lines to his house anyways. During the life of the system he will still have to put away 5 or so cents a KWH to cover maintenance costs, battery replacement, etc.
Agreed. It probably wouldn't make economic sense to go off grid if power was available at the building site, but since I would have to pay a large cost up front as well as continually escallating electric bills over the upcoming years, solar is looking better all the time.
........This is where I seriously would not mind the Chinese to come into the market and show the world how this could be made in bulk and force the other makers to compete on price . . .![]()
I agree costs will continue to rise and having solar for primary power, or as a secondary source of power in case of a power loss is a win win situation.
I just have to shake my head at the prices though . . . When it was 1980 you know what I could see prices in the 30-70K range.
But, common man . . . Its 2010 right now there is no reason for this old tech to be so freaking expansive!
None . . . My views are this segment is so small and those who make the panels etc simply have a monopoly on it so its pure profit when it comes time to purchase high quality solar cells like Kyrocera, Samsung, etc
This is where I seriously would not mind the Chinese to come into the market and show the world how this could be made in bulk and force the other makers to compete on price . . .
I am really hoping to see this nano tech grow and force the other players to look at their pricing . . .
I guess I better hope for the best in those GIC, Bonds, And stock shares to do well in the next 15 years . . .
This will be a long haul for sure . . .![]()
Agreed. It probably wouldn't make economic sense to go off grid if power was available at the building site, but since I would have to pay a large cost up front as well as continually escallating electric bills over the upcoming years, solar is looking better all the time.
my big peeve with solar, is without any subsidy it doesnt pencil out financially. You basically end up with taxpayers subsidizing people's electric bills. That money should be going to infrastructure, not to individuals (i see it as an illegal gift of public funds).
Thinking about it another way will piss you off more. Your tax dollars aren't just paying for other people's electric bills, you're paying for the generation of electrical power that the power company is going to turn around and sell back to you.
I think the film printing would be the cats meow if it can get into high production.
My guess, supply and demand...
Nanosolar has sold out production from their California plant for like 2 to 3 years or something crazy like that.


Bump for any updates.
My backyard is a large open area, sloping south east. I've thought about ground mounting a bunch of panels myself and adding to it as time goes by. I've 2 electricians in the family circle to assist.
- Josh
I don't follow: Are you saying they are doing so well they have sold all their future production which covers a 2-3 year period?
If so, where the frack is the cost savings going??![]()

You think a company that has orders for 3 years of production is going to lower their prices??![]()