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  • J.P.M.
    replied
    Originally posted by advan24r
    Here another quotation from my 3rd bid

    10 Sunpower X21 335 @ $3.74/DC Watt
    9 Sunpower X21 345 @ $3.69 /DC Watt (unless he was mistaken)

    All after incentives. Another question is, is the federal rebate supposed to be calculated BEFORE the Sunpower rebate or AFTER?
    1.) Price (~$5.30/Watt) still seems a bit high to me.

    2.) I didn't know Sunpower was offering rebates.

    Leave a comment:


  • advan24r
    replied
    Here another quotation from my 3rd bid

    10 Sunpower X21 335 @ $3.74/DC Watt
    9 Sunpower X21 345 @ $3.69 /DC Watt (unless he was mistaken)

    All after incentives. Another question is, is the federal rebate supposed to be calculated BEFORE the Sunpower rebate or AFTER?

    Leave a comment:


  • KRK
    replied
    Sure no problem

    Leave a comment:


  • advan24r
    replied
    Originally posted by KRK
    Wow..Ok, you guys way too smart for me on this board. I guess this is why I came to it, looking for direction.

    My annual usage in 2012 was 10,465 and I'm track for 2013 to use 10,950-11,000. I did call a buddy of mine after I read your post, and you are right there are limitations on the coverage and on January 1, 2014 the setbacks are moving to 3 feet from all edges of the roof lines including the roof caps for the City of San Diego and shortly Ca. State wide!!

    Do you have the white or all black? Would you be ok with the white on the front of the house?

    I have not made any considerations as to the offset. I thought 100% but I'm willing to listen to you experts whom have already done this once?
    I have the cash saved up to make the purchase. I just want to make the best financial decision for my family. I have no plans to sell in the next 10 years. It seems an outright purchase is the way to go instead of the pre-pays and the leases and loans?

    I just don't know math well enough to figure these things out. I'm a +/- guy. High school grad only!! I carry a gun for a living.....

    I don't want to be taken advantage of one way or another.....

    Thanks for the help

    KRK
    Hi KRK

    not to be mean but would you mind taking your questions to another thread? I've been getting alot of e-mail notifications on this thread since I created it to question about my solar panel set up.

    Leave a comment:


  • KRK
    replied
    Wow..Ok, you guys way too smart for me on this board. I guess this is why I came to it, looking for direction.

    My annual usage in 2012 was 10,465 and I'm track for 2013 to use 10,950-11,000. I did call a buddy of mine after I read your post, and you are right there are limitations on the coverage and on January 1, 2014 the setbacks are moving to 3 feet from all edges of the roof lines including the roof caps for the City of San Diego and shortly Ca. State wide!!

    Do you have the white or all black? Would you be ok with the white on the front of the house?

    I have not made any considerations as to the offset. I thought 100% but I'm willing to listen to you experts whom have already done this once?
    I have the cash saved up to make the purchase. I just want to make the best financial decision for my family. I have no plans to sell in the next 10 years. It seems an outright purchase is the way to go instead of the pre-pays and the leases and loans?

    I just don't know math well enough to figure these things out. I'm a +/- guy. High school grad only!! I carry a gun for a living.....

    I don't want to be taken advantage of one way or another.....

    Thanks for the help

    KRK

    Leave a comment:


  • J.P.M.
    replied
    Originally posted by KRK
    Also, I asked about the all black. One of the guy says the ALL Black do not perform as well as the White, is that true?
    Maybe. Maybe because black surfaces are hotter in the sun than white ones, and hot panels are less efficient than cold ones. BUT, I think the black/white refers to the back (underside) of the panel. I wonder (doubt) if anyone has hard #'s to show for it. Still - the statement seems to smack of common sense.

    Leave a comment:


  • Volusiano
    replied
    Originally posted by KRK
    I was told I could not expand with an inline inverter that is why the guy with SolarWorld told me to do the micros?
    Normally you want to right size the string inverter so in the future if you want to expand, you'd just add more string inverter that would match with your expansion.

    For some reason I thought if you went with Sunpower, you may have only about 20% more room for expansion, in which case it may be OK to "slightly" oversize your current inverter to add on a few more panels to the strings, but not much more. But I looked more carefully and it looks like you have room for 9 more panels before running out of roof space if you go with Sunpower. That would be 9x327W = 2.943 KW which is 40-50% expansion and not just 20%. In that case, Naptown is right, just right size it for now and add on another new (3K?) inverter later if you expand.

    On the micros, yes, it may be easier to expand, but like Naptown said, unless they really beef up the wiring up front considerably more for future expansion, you may have to add more wiring to support a lot more panels. Just simple math for when you want to add more power at a fixed voltage, you'll need to add more current -> need to beef up the wiring, unless it's already beefed up for expansion in the first place. That's one of the drawbacks of micros that they normally don't tell you. With strings, you can add more panels to strings to push the voltage (up to around 600V) to add power for the same wiring size with same current. With micros, the voltage is fixed at either 120 or 240V so pushing more power = pushing more current = beefier wiring needed.

    To add a new string inverter, you'll need to add new wiring for the new inverter, too, anyway, so it's not any different. Unless you just add a few more panels to existing strings of an existing "slightly" larger inverter like I was thinking earlier.

    Leave a comment:


  • J.P.M.
    replied
    [QUOTE=advan24r;93847]
    Originally posted by J.P.M.


    Very well said. I got an updated quote on another Sunpower system (all priced AFTER incentives), but the only downfall is that I would have to seperate the panels into 2 different arrays. Looks like it is slowly dropping after taking more time on shopping around. If I had more room on my roof, I would have tried to make it a larger system to take me off the grid but then again, price is a major factor since I don't want to pay over $18k BEFORE incentives. Are there any other panels that produce this many wattage other than Sunpower though and has the efficiency and quality as them? Also, CSI database..it's been exhausted for PG&E. I know in S.Cal especially San Diego there's still some left over.

    8 Sunpower X21 345 Panels @ $3.81/DCWatt
    9 Sunpower X21 335 Panels @ $3.78/DCWatt
    I'm aware of the rebate exhaustion situation(s). The reason I suggested the CSI database was so you could compare prices and get a reasonable feel for what others in your area have paid for Sunpower and other systems. It's a very valuable tool, full of the type of stuff vendors don't want customers to know. Check it out. Also, if by "take me off the grid" you mean reducing your electric bill to zero, I'd suggest considering that that option, while certainly a choice, may not be the most cost effective one. If you mean taking yourself off the grid by "batteries" - that's probably not an option for most folks anyway it's looked at - at least not at this time.

    Leave a comment:


  • J.P.M.
    replied
    Originally posted by KRK
    So here are my recent proposals. I'm planning on mounting on the front of the house since I have pool solar on the back.

    Reputable Company
    18 SunPower Panels NE-327 All Black
    Size 5.89
    Production monthly/annual = 883/10,595
    SunPower Inverter SPR-5000
    $21,887

    Reputable Company
    21 SunPower Panels 327 NE-Wht (Not as attractive)
    Size 6.86
    Production 10,020 annually
    Inverter PowerOne PUI-6000
    $21,630

    Reputable Company
    21 SunPower Panels NE-327 Wht (Not as attractive)
    Size 6.86
    Production 10,020 annually
    Inverter Same
    $21,470

    Been around about 4 years
    30 SolarWorld SW 265 MonoBlack (This would cover just about every square inch of the roof)
    Size 7.95 kW
    Production is just under 11,000 annually
    Enphase M215 Micro-Inverters
    $20,200


    What you guys think?
    Provided all the panels are at the same location orientation, elevation and shading, the annual production from a solar electric system in terms of how much electricity you get per year per nameplate (D.C) Watt of installed capacity should be about the same from one panel to the next. Sunpower MAY be a BIT higher. My non rigorous observation leads me to believe S.P. does less than 5% or so better +/- some per D.C. Watt on an annual basis. S.P. efficiency advantage is mostly, but not entiely a production per area efficiency advantage, not a production per D.C. Watt efficiency advantage. There is a small advantage from increased eff. as temp. goes up, but it's small in the overall scheme of things.

    1.) The first S.P. quote looks a little high on annual production (1.8 kW/W per year.). I've got 16 - 327's in north county San Diego with pretty good orientation. I watch it like a hawk. I'll get about 1.7W/kW per year from a new and clean system.

    2.) Depending on orientation, elevation and shading, the Solarworld and the other 2 S.P. quotes look a little low on annual production compared to the first S.P.Quote.. ( 1.38 to 1.45 kW/W per year). Other folks in my neighborhood are getting 1.4 to about 1.6 depending on orientation etc. for non S.P. and a bit more than that for S.P. Someone may be trying to sell you more than you may need by underestimating performance. No one ever got fired for selling too much. Caveat Emptor.

    3.) Have you considered how much of your annual electric load you want to offset ?

    4.) Have you determined the most cost effective amount (%) of your annual load to offset?

    5.) The fire marshal may not let you cover an entire roof section with panels. This may knock the Solarworld quote out of the box. Check the fire code yourself and don't assume the they or the vendor give you a correct answer.

    Leave a comment:


  • Naptown
    replied
    Originally posted by KRK
    I was told I could not expand with an inline inverter that is why the guy with SolarWorld told me to do the micros? Do you think there is room in the SunPower bids to get it a little lower or doeSunPower not negotiate?
    So with the micro inverters you would be able to add a grand total of maybe depending on how they wire things 4 panels to your system before you got into rewiring.
    You can always expand but it will mean adding an inverter. I do not suggest getting an overly large inverter now but wait till you need to add on and add one.
    Besides with the Solarworld panels taking up every square inch of roof where could you expand anyway?

    Leave a comment:


  • KRK
    replied
    Also, I asked about the all black. One of the guy says the ALL Black do not perform as well as the White, is that true?

    Leave a comment:


  • KRK
    replied
    I was told I could not expand with an inline inverter that is why the guy with SolarWorld told me to do the micros? Do you think there is room in the SunPower bids to get it a little lower or doeSunPower not negotiate?

    Leave a comment:


  • Volusiano
    replied
    If you decide to go with Sunpower so you can have an option for future expandability, maybe try to oversize you string inverter just a little bit more to make sure it can host the add-on panels without having to add another string inverter if you expand.

    Leave a comment:


  • Naptown
    replied
    At that minor difference in price I would go with #3
    I am a sunpower dealer so i am a bit biased.
    What would happen if you bought an EV. With the Sunpower system you could add on to it. Not so with the solar world.
    If you are that close in price between Solar World and Sunpower it kind of makes it a no brainer.

    Leave a comment:


  • KRK
    replied
    Well that makes sense. So currently there is not much of a difference in price so would it be best to go with SunPower?
    If the inline inverter comes into play and only comes down a grand, is that still worth the SolarWorld panels instead of the SunPower or should the savings be more like $3-5k?

    Leave a comment:

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