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Looking to go solar...everything looking good, am I missing something?
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If you want a 25 year warranty it will cost more any item with better coverage and build will. The smaller size helps on a lot of roofs that have limited space. As far as will the warranty and service be around is yet to be seen. You can say that about any product made cars, Home builders anything. I wanted the warranty and got the extended 20 year on the inverter. All anyone can due is research and try to get the best product, installer, warranty for the best price. Everyones comfort zone is different. -
Well that makes a pretty big difference as the Canadian Solar 11.2kW system is $24,001 net cost vs the Sun Power 11.2kW which is $29,732 net.Leave a comment:
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Say you buy a $43,000 system, you get back $13,900 ($12,900 fed & $1000 state), so your net is $29,100.
If you compare that to a $31,000 system, you get back $10,300 ($9,300 feb & $1,000 state), so your net is $20,700.
You're paying a net difference of $8,400 but your system was actually $12,000 more expensive.
Now on the other stuff about SunPower vs others, maybe the company I'm talking to is really pushing SunPower but according to the proposals I received, they are claiming that a 11.2kW system will produce the same power as a 12.24kW Canadian Solar setup. Are you saying that shouldn't be the case and they should produce the same amount of power? Because the Canadian Solar is less expensive at 12.24kW and would be even less expensive at 11.2kW.
He is full of it. An 11.2kW SunPower system will perform the same as an 11.2kW Canadian Solar system, it will just be smaller on the roof.Leave a comment:
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Jon, same exact issue here. I always find myself wondering how in the world is it hotter inside the house than outside if I cool the inside but then after shutting off the A/C, the temp in the house starts to increase even though the outside temp is lower.Leave a comment:
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Interesting, I have the same issue. In winter time here in socal we may have big fluctuations in outside temp where it may get into 70's during day but then cool at night down to 50 or even lower. Still what happens in my house is the second floor gets hot at night while it's cold outside. And the attic temp is cool (I have a remote thermometer). If I cool it down either by AC or by opening a window and whole house fan it will cool temporarily but after I shut the window or turn off AC after a while the second floor is hot again. I don't understand where the heat is coming from. Haven't heard this term "thermal mass" before, i'll have to look that up and see what that means. My house is a stucco house as I suspect the AZ house is as well.Leave a comment:
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The best by what and by who's criteria ? Most bang for your buck? No way. One more time: Equally (electrical) sized systems in the same location and orientation and service will produce nearly identical yearly output when new and probably for some years into the future. A 10kW system with Canadian Solar, Kyocera, LG, etc. or just about any reputable panel installed by a good vendor will have about the same initial output as Sunpower - where you are with a decent orientation and no shading probably something like 18,000 kWhrs./yr. for ANY of them for a 10 kW system. Lots of public information will confirm this. Sunpower does the same as the others but does so with a smaller footprint - that's where the "most efficient" claim comes from - and a whole lot more money. You need look no farther than the quotes you've got. If you are cramped for space, a case MAY be made for S.P. area efficiency. Otherwise, your wasting roof space and spending money that need not be spent. Sunpower's warranty MAY be better. The necessity of that advantage is yet to be demonstrated. S.P. is great stuff. So is a Mercedes - which hauls groceries no better than a ford. Solar panels are an appliance - not a lifestyle. S.P. gets you good equipment, but performance is no better than other good equipment. For the price premium you get bragging rights and a slimmer wallet. Pay your money, take your choice.
As for tax credit - the fed. tax credit is 30% regardless of size, or manufacturer so you definitely do not get more bang for your buck w/ the fed. Note your examples are both about 32% credit. I'm unfamiliar w/any AZ rebates credits. Perhaps AZ posters can fill in the blanks on that info. As for finance charges, you're not getting less solar for your money, you're paying a higher price for the use of the money you are borrowing. I know that sounds like playing with words, but 7.99% on less financed is still better than 2.99% on a lot more money for the same end performance. Do your homework, crunch some $$ #'s and look at the whole package. You're financing and spending dollars, not percentages.
Say you buy a $43,000 system, you get back $13,900 ($12,900 fed & $1000 state), so your net is $29,100.
If you compare that to a $31,000 system, you get back $10,300 ($9,300 feb & $1,000 state), so your net is $20,700.
You're paying a net difference of $8,400 but your system was actually $12,000 more expensive.
Now on the other stuff about SunPower vs others, maybe the company I'm talking to is really pushing SunPower but according to the proposals I received, they are claiming that a 11.2kW system will produce the same power as a 12.24kW Canadian Solar setup. Are you saying that shouldn't be the case and they should produce the same amount of power? Because the Canadian Solar is less expensive at 12.24kW and would be even less expensive at 11.2kW.
On another note, he also told me about the SunPower 240 AC panels with micro-inverters. The price is within $350 of the 320 DC panels but apparently the 25 year warranty covers everything, so no need to worry about replacing an inverter after 10+ years after the warranty runs out. What is your though on that?
Finally, he said he could do a SunEdison system for $3.50/watt, so about a $4700 price difference between the SunPower and SunEdison. I had one company tell me that SunEdison and SunPower are basically the same in efficiency, reliability, etc...basically equally good. Any input on that?Leave a comment:
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Our heat is actually on gas.The crazy thing is that even the in winter, our A/C runs. We set it at 77º and if it turns on, it turns on...and sometimes it does. Our house is 2,900 sq ft and now we added a pool too so the usage is going to be even bigger. It's a variable speed pump though so that is supposed to help.
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As for tax credit - the fed. tax credit is 30% regardless of size, or manufacturer so you definitely do not get more bang for your buck w/ the fed. Note your examples are both about 32% credit. I'm unfamiliar w/any AZ rebates credits. Perhaps AZ posters can fill in the blanks on that info.Leave a comment:
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Ok so here come the big dogs! I finally got a quote on SunPower panels and inverter, which everyone seems to agree are the best in the industry. They actually quoted me on the largest system yet, 11.2kW, to cover 100% of yearly electricity. I'm waiting to receive the month-by-month production number so I can plug them in and see if it's worth going with a system that big.
11.2kW system producing 21,300 kWh per year
35 x SunPower SPR-320NW-WHT-D 320W panels
1 x SunPower SPR-11401f-i UNI inverter
$43,904 pre-tax credits ($3.92/watt) - $29,732.80 after tax credits ($2.65/watt)
You do get a better "bang for your buck" on these more expensive systems because you get a lot more back tax credit wise. So for example a $44,000 system will end up being $30,000 net, while a $31,000 system would be $21,000 net...so you get $14,000 for $9,000 basically.
One thing I've learned, which I wasn't told of until today, is that these 2.99% financing deals seem to only be available on the higher priced panels (SunPower, SunEdison). The lower priced (Canadian Solar, Hanwha) have a rate of 7.99% so you're getting a lot less for your money, combined with less tax credit, doesn't really seem to make a lot of sense.
As for tax credit - the fed. tax credit is 30% regardless of size, or manufacturer so you definitely do not get more bang for your buck w/ the fed. Note your examples are both about 32% credit. I'm unfamiliar w/any AZ rebates credits. Perhaps AZ posters can fill in the blanks on that info. As for finance charges, you're not getting less solar for your money, you're paying a higher price for the use of the money you are borrowing. I know that sounds like playing with words, but 7.99% on less financed is still better than 2.99% on a lot more money for the same end performance. Do your homework, crunch some $$ #'s and look at the whole package. You're financing and spending dollars, not percentages.Leave a comment:
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Our heat is actually on gas.The crazy thing is that even the in winter, our A/C runs. We set it at 77º and if it turns on, it turns on...and sometimes it does. Our house is 2,900 sq ft and now we added a pool too so the usage is going to be even bigger. It's a variable speed pump though so that is supposed to help.
Leave a comment:
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Our heat is actually on gas.The crazy thing is that even the in winter, our A/C runs. We set it at 77º and if it turns on, it turns on...and sometimes it does. Our house is 2,900 sq ft and now we added a pool too so the usage is going to be even bigger. It's a variable speed pump though so that is supposed to help.
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Well, it could be the use of a heat pump - we do see sub freezing temperatures here in Phoenix. But then I look at my August usage prior to solar for a 2300 sq.ft house and see 3500 kWh consumed. And I don't have a swimming pool. My annual is 18750 kWh so his home wouldn't have to be much bigger to reach those numbers.Leave a comment:
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Ok so here come the big dogs! I finally got a quote on SunPower panels and inverter, which everyone seems to agree are the best in the industry. They actually quoted me on the largest system yet, 11.2kW, to cover 100% of yearly electricity. I'm waiting to receive the month-by-month production number so I can plug them in and see if it's worth going with a system that big.
11.2kW system producing 21,300 kWh per year
35 x SunPower SPR-320NW-WHT-D 320W panels
1 x SunPower SPR-11401f-i UNI inverter
$43,904 pre-tax credits ($3.92/watt) - $29,732.80 after tax credits ($2.65/watt)
You do get a better "bang for your buck" on these more expensive systems because you get a lot more back tax credit wise. So for example a $44,000 system will end up being $30,000 net, while a $31,000 system would be $21,000 net...so you get $14,000 for $9,000 basically.
One thing I've learned, which I wasn't told of until today, is that these 2.99% financing deals seem to only be available on the higher priced panels (SunPower, SunEdison). The lower priced (Canadian Solar, Hanwha) have a rate of 7.99% so you're getting a lot less for your money, combined with less tax credit, doesn't really seem to make a lot of sense.Leave a comment:
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