Hello from Dublin, CA.
In the short time I've been registered on this board, I've been poring over threads and researching till solar is coming out of my ears.
Why I want to go solar?
We moved into this place about 2yrs ago and will likely stay here for the foreseeable future (at least the next 10 years).
Our usage over the last year was about 7500 kWh, with a $120/mo average bill. Definitely higher usage in the summer from running the A/C. We can only see our usage going up with a growing family.
I don't want to be subject to the pricing whims of a pseudo-monopoly, and am willing to make an upfront investment to free us from that.
I watched the PG&E/CSI incentives dry up and want to get in before the Fed credit, net metering, and aggressive depreciation schedules for leases dry up.
My Research Notes:
I've completed my initial analysis and interviewed 6 companies: Sungevity, Real Goods Solar, Solar City, Sunpower(Skypower), REC Solar(Sunrun), Verengo.
Real Goods was the only one who tried to convince me to purchase.
Solar City tried to push me into signing a $0 down PPA.
Sunpower's price was just really high, not even competitive.
Verengo's projected year 1 output numbers were curiously low compared to the other 5 companies. I'm not sure why. They're the only ones who tried to set me up with a 5.5 kw system.
When it came down to it, REC Solar (acquired by Sunrun) came in with the lowest quote.
I'm looking at their 4.68 kW system. Components: 18x REC 260W Panels, Power-One Inverter:PVI-3.6-OUTD-S-US-A (240V)
20-yr prepaid lease: $2.36/W before incentives, $2.21/W after for a 20-yr prepaid lease.
The purchase price: $3.45/W before rebates/incentives, $2.27/W after.
After incentives, a lease will cost $10,350 vs a purchase price of $10630. I have not even tried to negotiate down yet... I will.
Year 1 guaranteed output (6961 kWh) should cover about 94% of our usage based on last year's numbers. 20-yr guaranteed output total of 132,300 kWh. Effective rate of $.078/kWh.
I've calculated my break-even point using various methods of between 7.2 - 7.8 yrs (is there a standard way to calculate this)?
What I like about the 20-yr prepaid lease (in general, across all vendors)
No warranty, maintenance, or "cost-of-ownership" headaches (I worry about my A/C going out every summer and the unknown cost of getting it fixed)
Up front cost is generally cheaper than ownership (actual $280 savings in my case)
Inverter and panel failure covered for 20 years (estimated $2500 savings)
No additional insurance premium (estimated $1000 savings @ $50/yr increase... per my Farmers agent)
Monitoring web portal included (not included with ownership... specific to Sunrun)
Guaranteed output with escalating refund for under-performance (starting at $.088 at Yr 1 to $.152 at Yr 20)
Very low buyout cost at Yr 20, or free system removal
Easy to transfer lease upon house sale, adds similar value to house if we did sell
Contingency funds set aside for continuing warranty/maintenance over the life of the lease if Sunrun declares bankruptcy (specific to Sunrun)
Is there anything I'm missing on why should I own vs lease? I've gone over it multiple times, and can't think of any.
Any other feedback on REC Solar/Sunrun would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Sam
In the short time I've been registered on this board, I've been poring over threads and researching till solar is coming out of my ears.
Why I want to go solar?
We moved into this place about 2yrs ago and will likely stay here for the foreseeable future (at least the next 10 years).
Our usage over the last year was about 7500 kWh, with a $120/mo average bill. Definitely higher usage in the summer from running the A/C. We can only see our usage going up with a growing family.
I don't want to be subject to the pricing whims of a pseudo-monopoly, and am willing to make an upfront investment to free us from that.
I watched the PG&E/CSI incentives dry up and want to get in before the Fed credit, net metering, and aggressive depreciation schedules for leases dry up.
My Research Notes:
I've completed my initial analysis and interviewed 6 companies: Sungevity, Real Goods Solar, Solar City, Sunpower(Skypower), REC Solar(Sunrun), Verengo.
Real Goods was the only one who tried to convince me to purchase.
Solar City tried to push me into signing a $0 down PPA.
Sunpower's price was just really high, not even competitive.
Verengo's projected year 1 output numbers were curiously low compared to the other 5 companies. I'm not sure why. They're the only ones who tried to set me up with a 5.5 kw system.
When it came down to it, REC Solar (acquired by Sunrun) came in with the lowest quote.
I'm looking at their 4.68 kW system. Components: 18x REC 260W Panels, Power-One Inverter:PVI-3.6-OUTD-S-US-A (240V)
20-yr prepaid lease: $2.36/W before incentives, $2.21/W after for a 20-yr prepaid lease.
The purchase price: $3.45/W before rebates/incentives, $2.27/W after.
After incentives, a lease will cost $10,350 vs a purchase price of $10630. I have not even tried to negotiate down yet... I will.
Year 1 guaranteed output (6961 kWh) should cover about 94% of our usage based on last year's numbers. 20-yr guaranteed output total of 132,300 kWh. Effective rate of $.078/kWh.
I've calculated my break-even point using various methods of between 7.2 - 7.8 yrs (is there a standard way to calculate this)?
What I like about the 20-yr prepaid lease (in general, across all vendors)
No warranty, maintenance, or "cost-of-ownership" headaches (I worry about my A/C going out every summer and the unknown cost of getting it fixed)
Up front cost is generally cheaper than ownership (actual $280 savings in my case)
Inverter and panel failure covered for 20 years (estimated $2500 savings)
No additional insurance premium (estimated $1000 savings @ $50/yr increase... per my Farmers agent)
Monitoring web portal included (not included with ownership... specific to Sunrun)
Guaranteed output with escalating refund for under-performance (starting at $.088 at Yr 1 to $.152 at Yr 20)
Very low buyout cost at Yr 20, or free system removal
Easy to transfer lease upon house sale, adds similar value to house if we did sell
Contingency funds set aside for continuing warranty/maintenance over the life of the lease if Sunrun declares bankruptcy (specific to Sunrun)
Is there anything I'm missing on why should I own vs lease? I've gone over it multiple times, and can't think of any.
Any other feedback on REC Solar/Sunrun would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Sam
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