I took it as he did the wiring himself.Think he means the wiring just got done, not necessary they did it. 1 source outsources a lot so that delays stuff.
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I took it as he did the wiring himself.Think he means the wiring just got done, not necessary they did it. 1 source outsources a lot so that delays stuff.
Went to our local county fair the other day and the county power co-op was advertising solar panels/generators. We are in the very preliminary stages of eventually buying ~4 acres of farm ground from family to build a forever home acreage. Mostly verbal conversations so far.
With moving into the country a generator would be nice in case of a storm causing an outage.
Anyone else bite the bullet and go solar on an acreage?
Can you have a combination of power sources? Maybe have solar be a secondary resource, not primary.
The snow will definitely slide off a little quicker so watch for the possible small avalanche at times unless you plan to use a snow broom to clean off. I do have a long reach snow broom and clean ours off enough they melt pretty quick once the sun hits them.Not powered up yet, but panels are on the garage now. They face west, but there wasn't quite enough room on the house and didn't want to build a structure for them at this time.
Thinking it should be up and running in September sometime. View attachment 101320
The snow will definitely slide off a little quicker so watch for the possible small avalanche at times unless you plan to use a snow broom to clean off. I do have a long reach snow broom and clean ours off enough they melt pretty quick once the sun hits them.
Yep. I got a telescoping pole one. Stand on our deck and can reach most of the panels. The suckiest weather is when it starts as rain or wet heavy snow and then turns cold as hell. **** just freezes on. Always kind of wished they could somehow make it so you could run a little heat/current through them to warm the panels just enough. A good sunny winter day is a great production day. They are more efficient in cold air. It is the shorter daylight hours that hurt in the winter and obviously cloudy days. Ours are on our south facing roof so directly in line with the winter sun.I use a roof rake that screws into a 28 foot paint pole. Works really well and keeps production going in the winter. Sunny days with snow on the ground is as good as some summer days with the light reflecting off the snow. You do have to be proactive and get the snow off before it thaws and freezes though as ice is basically impossible to get off panels without them heating up. Usually takes me about an hour to clean them, but it’s a nice excuse to get outside in the winter
https://www.roofrake.com/Productpages/snowpro2.asp
i'm looking at getting some used solar panels and a battery pack.... running a window AC off solar only...
just had my first electric bill in Texas.... $290.. and our AC is set at 78w
ya well. Texas has its perks and its drawbacks. I'm just planning on doing an off grid system. no meteringWow! Don't know the rules in your state and what your utility has to do for payback or net metering, etc. But the bill for my two story house was not that much per month in the summer with A/C set at 71.
Alliant is the best for payback. They used to do monthly net metering. I am on a cooperative and it’s 15 minute net metering. With Alliant, a battery would not be as useful. With a cooperative like mine, if the price would be about half its amount then it would start to make sense.Wow! Don't know the rules in your state and what your utility has to do for payback or net metering, etc. But the bill for my two story house was not that much per month in the summer with A/C set at 71.
We have Alliant.Alliant is the best for payback. They used to do monthly net metering. I am on a cooperative and it’s 15 minute net metering. With Alliant, a battery would not be as useful. With a cooperative like mine, if the price would be about half its amount then it would start to make sense.
No. The electrical contractor is behind the installation by a few weeks. 1source does the panel installation and the programming. A subcontractor (I thought they were good) does the wiring for them. Then 1 source is supposed to follow up with the final programming and witness test after all the final approvals come through.So they did the panel install and you did the wiring yourself? what was the cost savings on that?
Following this thread too. Lease vs buy is another question I have.Bump. I have a guy coming out to my house on Monday to give me an estimate on installing solar panels on my house.
All you guys out there that have solar power, how is it working for you?? Have you saved much off your electric bill?? What questions do I need to ask. Thanks in advance.
Mike
Can you pm me who you used? Assuming you're in IowaHad a few quotes in the past month. Honestly the payoff time was much shorter than I anticipated (around 7 years). Need to knock out a couple other projects then will prioritize this one.
One Source, Rabe and Eagle Point.Can you pm me who you used? Assuming you're in Iowa
ECG in Anamosa did mine and they are really good. Eagle point gave a good quote too, but Rabe was high and very slow responding.Can you pm me who you used? Assuming you're in Iowa