HamAndEggs
Well-known member
Exactly why I got Grid Tied solar and a 27kw generator instead of batteries
If you only care about the cost side of it, sure.It is a math problem. Nothing else. Electricity follows math laws. Finance follows math. Simply put, in my case, we cannot install solar for anywhere close to what we pay for power now and get the money back in less than 20 years. The batteries won't last that long and none of our friends here in the Central Valley have gotten that life out of their solar systems. I am 71 and may life 10 - 12 more years if I am like other males in my family. Or I can go in five years, or two. If I can't buy a solar system cash and zero out the cost in 10 years I am not interested. I don't care if it is roof mounted, replaces a patio cover and only produces partial power, or is an array in the side yard. If it doesn't pencil then it is something I will never buy. I was told 10 years ago when I first looked that the cost of electricity under our utility makes it almost impossible to pencil out. Our utility covers about 2 million people, and there are only 6400 solar installations in that per some numbers they just released. I am not the only one having issues with the math it appears.
Make sure your cost estimates also include possible price increases, a lot I have seen only includes current prices
Buying solar NOW locks in how much you are paying for power for at least 30 years, and then beats inflation too


TLDR:This is a good video;
I can't imagine signing a contract for that much money and not understanding it. If you can't understand it on your own, ask for help or hire a lawyer. I find it hard to sympathize with his self inflicted problemThis is a good video;
If they'd have taken two weeks to install would this video even been made?I can't imagine signing a contract for that much money and not understanding it. If you can't understand it on your own, ask for help or hire a lawyer. I find it hard to sympathize with his self inflicted problem
So I ended up paying $43,605 / 12,480 = $3.49 per watt. That was a little on the high side in 2016, but I had extra work done - they moved/rerouted about 3 plumbing stacks, changed out 4 eyebrow type roof vents, all conduit was run through the attic, and it wasn't very common at the time, but they guaranteed the production for 10 years or they would fix it/pay me the balance.
just got an e-mail newsletter from my POC. "Solar customers already connected to the grid before March 1, 2022 can remain on the existing Net Energy Metering (NEM) rate through December 31, 2030 unless they add battery storage with incentives, modify or replace their existing system or move into a new home that has solar installed."
The new rate is 7.4 cents kWh buyback. So time of day pricing at 6-8 pm when the 110F heat is coming in here, and the solar isn't putting out is about 35 cents a kWh. But the excess power one generates from 11am to 3pm gets sold back at 7.4 cents kWh.
Does anyone think they can make the math work at that? If so I'd like to know how. And that newsletter was written before Ukraine was invaded and Brent crude went to $106 barrel today. Also as to EV, how do you charge your EV car during the day when your solar is producing, when it is 40 miles from home at the office. Long extension cord or something?
Sorry i can't afford wood even though i have 60 acres of white oak with house in the middle. Truck, trailer, splitter, chain saw, moving the wood two or three times and oh my time. Or turn up the thermostat.Wood
Is the ultimate solar battery.
unfortunately we only use about 250 kwh a month during normal solar hours. Most of our usage is at night (TV and AC) or early AM (clothes dryer) when solar is not producing, and in summer late afternoon and at night when the heat soak comes thru the insulation. Using the PCO solar calculator the breakeven would be at 15 years on a small system like that. I am at the point of diminishing returns.I could make it work, I would just invest in a smaller system. I have a near constant 2-3kw base load during the day. So If I had 3kw of solar, it would be a very cheap install, and it would just shave my base load off
If you already have solar then you're fine, in 2030 I assume batteries will be much cheaper
My system was designed and guaranteed to produce 19,900 kWh annually allowing .9% degradation each year for 10 years. In calendar year 2021, (5 years later) the system produced 21,170 kWh and never has been below 19,900kWhDid they give you a projection based on the actual installation output (orientation and tilt of panels)? The real number you want is price per KWH/year.

No. You would have to sit down with a good solar contractor that has the expensive software and run the numbers. personally, I don't think it would pencil outjust got an e-mail newsletter from my POC. "Solar customers already connected to the grid before March 1, 2022 can remain on the existing Net Energy Metering (NEM) rate through December 31, 2030 unless they add battery storage with incentives, modify or replace their existing system or move into a new home that has solar installed."
The new rate is 7.4 cents kWh buyback. So time of day pricing at 6-8 pm when the 110F heat is coming in here, and the solar isn't putting out is about 35 cents a kWh. But the excess power one generates from 11am to 3pm gets sold back at 7.4 cents kWh.
Does anyone think they can make the math work at that? If so I'd like to know how. And that newsletter was written before Ukraine was invaded and Brent crude went to $106 barrel today. Also as to EV, how do you charge your EV car during the day when your solar is producing, when it is 40 miles from home at the office. Long extension cord or something?
just got an e-mail newsletter from my POC. "Solar customers already connected to the grid before March 1, 2022 can remain on the existing Net Energy Metering (NEM) rate through December 31, 2030 unless they add battery storage with incentives, modify or replace their existing system or move into a new home that has solar installed."
Point taken. Ignoring the EV chargers that are at the office, I'd say the fact that I go into the office about 1 day every two weeks plays.Also as to EV, how do you charge your EV car during the day when your solar is producing, when it is 40 miles from home at the office. Long extension cord or something?
I have no desire to be California's poster child on how white people are beating the system.
[Putin] is just as crazy as the people driving this solar calculation issue.
I thought CA was mainly an income tax state, but it appears that property tax is a pretty good chunk of local revenue. Do you tell the local tax appraiser when you remodel the inside of your home?
If not, isn't that beating the system?
yeah but, everyone seems to think "why aren't we keeping it here?"Interesting facts:
The US imports about 700,000 barrels per day of crude oil and other petroleum products from Russia
The Keystone Pipeline would have carried about 830,000 barrels per day from Canada...
In 2020, the total U.S. annual petroleum production was greater than total petroleum consumption


Ignoring the Russia bait.the only thing I would suggest today is buy panels that are made anywhere except Russia or China.
I went solar to hopefully lower my carbon footprint. If I end up paying off my costs and get some "free" electricity that will be a bonus. I have debt for the solar. A lot of people would say I should have invested the money instead, but it is almost certainty I would not have invested the money.