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The street I live on only has two houses with out solar and they are rentals that the owners were original to the small development we have.
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we looked at the same size, around 8kw. price was much different, around 40k. they managed to drop it down a lot, I think in the 20'smaybe 30k. they also wanted to add insulation in the attic and some kind of barrier which I don't think they could have put up. when I got online to check the size I kept coming up with around 15kw system. I found the price of the panels and inverter and I think it totaled about 12k. add in installation and that price was waaaaay lower than my purchase price. I backed out until I could research it more. |
When I first checked out a solar system almost ten years ago, I got bids for around $50K. I decided to wait for costs to go down. My house is all electric, & I live in a rural area and always intended to convert to a solar system. Prices here are running in the $1K+ per panel range around here. Since our net metering program has closed out and demand has declined somewhat, the price may have gone down more. You can't install your own system here unless you are a licensed electrician for doing that. My roof isn't the usual pitched roof where they could just install the panels against the roof. It's a low pitch roof with a parapet wall, so they had to make a supporting structure for the panels. The company kept referring to it as a "flat" roof even though I'd correct them & say it had a shallow pitch. Consequently I think it cost them more in man hours to install it than they anticipated. I'll post a pic of it. If you can do it yourself or have friends do it, that's all well & good. Otherwise I think a realistic ROI is in the six to seven year range as far as cost is concerned.
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are any you having any kind of insulation upgrade done to your house to make it more efficient?
I think that is where I was suppose to make up some of the differences. I want to say I am using around 20kw a month??? and they wanted to install an 8kw system I think. yea, that's considered a flat roof. |
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Look at your bill and see how many kWh you are using per month. Divide this by 150 and that should be the approximate size of your solar energy system. If you are in a super sunny area like San Diego, you might divide by 180. If you cannot get net metering, you need to look deeper and see what your maximum usage is at various points during the day and design a system to cut your usage down to that level. If I was in San Diego and without Net Metering, I would still install a system, I just would install a much smaller system. If I read things correctly, San Diego is now not paying for any power generated and sent out of the system. You can do it "two ways" but it is better just to lose the excess power. |
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