Greetings,
Definite newbie here. We sold everything in the city and moved to the country. Lots of land and good exposure to the southern sky for solar power adventures. I don't have an electrical background but I am an engineer.
Looking at a couple projects to start:
1. Solar powered deer fence for gardens and orchards. A couple acres or so to start. Most of the fence controllers I have seen so far appear to be designed for plugging into grid 110V AC power. Prefer to do an autonomous configuration with battery storage. Need to get back to YouTube and find some sample configurations that I found last year.
2. Looking at grid tie inverter kits just to see what is available. What I found on Amazon (yes, I'm sure there are better sources) seems like a bad investment. Is the following math correct?
Unit cost $800. After US Fed 30% tax break call it $560.
Power company lists our KwH rate at just over $0.12.
Advertisement w/ unit described 240 Watt panel and estimates 400kWh/yr.
So: 400 * 0.12 = $48/yr of power generated (and presumably used) and therefore the ROI on the kit is $560 / $48/yr = 11.6 years ... assuming static rate @ 12 cents / KWh and zero maintenance.
Is this correct? Over 11 years to break even? I'm hoping that somehow this math is incorrect or much cheaper configurations are available. I understand the draw to solar power and want to jump on the bandwagon but this long of an ROI seems like a bad idea.
All suggestions and comments welcome. Thanks.
Definite newbie here. We sold everything in the city and moved to the country. Lots of land and good exposure to the southern sky for solar power adventures. I don't have an electrical background but I am an engineer.
Looking at a couple projects to start:
1. Solar powered deer fence for gardens and orchards. A couple acres or so to start. Most of the fence controllers I have seen so far appear to be designed for plugging into grid 110V AC power. Prefer to do an autonomous configuration with battery storage. Need to get back to YouTube and find some sample configurations that I found last year.
2. Looking at grid tie inverter kits just to see what is available. What I found on Amazon (yes, I'm sure there are better sources) seems like a bad investment. Is the following math correct?
Unit cost $800. After US Fed 30% tax break call it $560.
Power company lists our KwH rate at just over $0.12.
Advertisement w/ unit described 240 Watt panel and estimates 400kWh/yr.
So: 400 * 0.12 = $48/yr of power generated (and presumably used) and therefore the ROI on the kit is $560 / $48/yr = 11.6 years ... assuming static rate @ 12 cents / KWh and zero maintenance.
Is this correct? Over 11 years to break even? I'm hoping that somehow this math is incorrect or much cheaper configurations are available. I understand the draw to solar power and want to jump on the bandwagon but this long of an ROI seems like a bad idea.
All suggestions and comments welcome. Thanks.
Comment