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![]() Solar Guppy wrote: And what does a 2 kWh system cost 15,000 mean ? What it says. You buy (not build) a complete 2 kW system for $15,000. See below is that what you paid or No. There was a long thread in alt.engineering.electrical discussing this - it's the price mentioned by a guy in Maine for a commercial system. There's a guy off grid in California who built his own, like you did. His cost for solar + inverter, not including batteries & DC instrumentation, was about 10K for 4 kW. See the site for details: http://www.electronconnection.com/Media/OurSystem.pdf just some made up numbers like your 16kWr per day which is pure fiction .. Not "pure fiction". I clearly labeled it an assumption, which is WAY different than "pure fiction". Here's the quote, since you may have missed the first word: "Assuming an average of 8 hours per day of 2kW per hour, that solar system would give me 16 kWh. " I built my 6 kWh system for 17K ... I don't doubt that. Your write up lends credence to the much higher cost of a commercial system vs a do-it-yourself system. You indicated it was very labor intensive to build the first one, taking over 5 months of your spare time. A first time builder would go well over the 6 days labor you cited on your second build. In any event, the labor cost would be borne in the purchase price of a commercial system. www.solar-guppy.com , you can see my invoices and the system installed in the photo gallery. Also under real-time status you can see the energy being delivered ... , anyone can buy the parts today for a similar amount , check out the solar deals sections for links http://www.solar-guppy.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=12 as examples. My average per day is about 24kWr/day so far (3 months) , my electrical rate is now 12 cents kWr (they have raised the rates about 2 cents kWh in the least year , more increases to come for sure) Your average proves that my assumption is way too high. Perhaps that's what you meant by "pure fiction". Anyway, your 6 kW system produces 24kWhr/day in Florida - I would expect lower if it was installed here (in NY). And it means best case, a 2kW system here would produce about 1/3 that or about 1/2 what I assumed. That doubles the "payback" time - which would never happen with the 2kW system at $15,000 here. 24 * .12 = 2.88 .. 17,000 / 2.88 = 5902 (days) = 16.17 years My , Real system , My real rates NO REBATES ... And at $17,000 for the system, your mortgage cost assuming 25 years, 7% will be over $36,000. Therefore, your *real* payback is 36000/2.88 = 12500 (days) = 34.25 years. That assumes your system requires no replacement parts, no regular maintenance costs, and does not degrade over time, for the full 34 + years. Do the same thing in California , where 65 % of the cost is covered (50% materials , 15% state-tax rebate) and the payback is reduced to 17k * .45 = 7650 ... 7650 / 2.88 2656 (days) = 7.27 years .. its actually much better in CA than this since the rates can be TOU (time of use) , the typical CA rates are .15 - .25 kWhr ... putting the payback at 3.49 years at 25 cents kWh ( a typical afternoon TOU rate) .... wrote in message ... "Watson A.Name \"Watt Sun - the Dark Remover\"" wrote: Joel Kolstad wrote: Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover" wrote: My attitude is that rather than try to do this (and in the process lose reliability), it's better to go supersize on the cells, add more area and overall capacity to get you thru the cloudy days, and have a higher capacity overall. The argument usually goes that getting, say, 10-20% more power from a better charge controller (one of these so-called 'maximum power point controllers') can be cheaper (in additional expenditures) than getting 10-20% larger panels. It's sometimes difficult to show, though, particularly on small systems -- but MPPT controllers have been getting cheaper for awhile, now, and I expect that eventually all but the cheapest/smallest will have this functionality. Last nite (Tue, 9pm) I watched a prog on PBS that was about getting people to use more renewable resources, hosted by Cameron Diaz (hot blonde movie star), who drives a Prius. They talked about getting every home to have a solar panel, and selling power back to the utility co. She also said that if everyone in the U.S. drove a hybrid vehicle, we could completely eliminate oil shipments from the middle east. Well, I'd go out and buy a Prius, but one of the guys at work has had his new Prius since xmas and it took him 4 months or so to get it after submitting a $500 earnest check to several dealerships to get on their waiting list. They say they're trying to make more of them, but I think they really don't want the prices to fall, since they're expensive to make. In any case I'd like more solar power, but the initial outlay is _not_ cheap. Nor does it pay for itself in any reasonable time, if at all, if you are grid connected. (If you need to spend a huge amount to get connected to the grid, solar can become very attractive.) A guy in Florida quoted 48 years pay back time. I ran the numbers for my home - over 40 years, and I pay 13 cents per kwh. A 2 kW system costs $15000. Assuming an average of 8 hours per day of 2kW per hour, that solar system would give me 16 kWh. I pay 16*.13 or $2.08 for 16 kWh. Works out to 19+ years for payback, if you don't count on mortgage payments for the system. Add that in, and the cost of a $15000 system is much worse - over 30,000 in a 25 year, 7% mortgage. |
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