Solar edge vs enphase
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solaredge vs. enphase
hi folks,
I'm new to this but doing research. I appreciate all comments so far. But one of the issues I read about elsewhere is efficiency & failure: if one panel in Solar edge is bad or producing lower energy it effects the whole power output. Whereas with enphase they are individually wired so this wouldn't be a problem. Am I wrong on this? ThanksComment
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hi folks,
I'm new to this but doing research. I appreciate all comments so far. But one of the issues I read about elsewhere is efficiency & failure: if one panel in Solar edge is bad or producing lower energy it effects the whole power output. Whereas with enphase they are individually wired so this wouldn't be a problem. Am I wrong on this? ThanksOutBack FP1 w/ CS6P-250P http://bit.ly/1Sg5VNHComment
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Agreed. Just wanted to put that out there though.
I had a salesman come to price me out for a system, the company he worked for used solaredge inverters, he had no idea what the power optimizers were. That was red flag #2 with him. Redflag #1: "What you should do is max out your roof w/ LG-300 panels build up your net credits and use electric heaters for your primary heat source in the winter"Comment
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On the designs I work on, I like to try to max production upto 110% of consumption while minimizing costs and meeting any customer specific requests ( Black on Black, bymodal, etc.). currently solarEdge and Canadian more often than not, hit the best price point for us.OutBack FP1 w/ CS6P-250P http://bit.ly/1Sg5VNHComment
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While Enphase warranty may not cover labor, many solar installers provide their own service warranty. I purchased an 11.44 kw with Enphase micro-inverters from Direct Energy, and they provide a 20 year labor warranty on the panels and micro-inverters.Comment
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Direct Energy was great! I got bids from six companies. Direct wasn't the cheapest (although it was very close), but they had the best warranties, good reviews, and rock solid financial backing from the parent company which made me decide to pay a couple extra dollars for the security that they will be around in the long run to back up their labor warranties. The process was very smooth. They did not try to push me into a PPA/Lease as others tried to, and were helpful and responsive throughout. That being said, a company is usually judged on how they respond when something goes wrong, which hasn't happend yet. So if it does, we shall see how it goes. But for now, I give them two thumbs upComment
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The electric heat idea
The electric heat idea seems like a bad one but I guess depending on the cost of your current heating options I suppose it could make some sense.Comment
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paying the extra cost to oversize your system with the intent on "building up net credits" for annual winter heating is risky, as it assumes that current 1:1 net metering will continue long term. This assumption is tenuous at best. As much as I LOVE current net metering, the utilities have a valid point that it is unfair, and IMO will eventually will put enough money into politicians pockets to have the regulations changed.Comment
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It is a terrible idea seeing I can't print the money to max out my roof (we are oversizing by 25% as it is to cover additions) and I live in Massachusetts. Electric heat can add up FAST in the winter.Comment
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Guaranteed net metering would make it particularly attractive. Make a lot of power in the summer. Get it back in the winter.Comment
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