I financially dismissed solar for years because my wife and I would only use an average of 10kWh/day and our SCE bill would rarely be over $40. We'd use the central air conditioner from time to time to make sure it didn't break from non-use, and we'd let our house get into the low 80s before we buckled…I bought into the whole energy conservation thing when our local nuclear power plant was decommissioned. This summer, we've had a bit of home construction done and we've ran the AC a few times during our perpetual summer heat wave. Our SCE bill has been about $70 during the last few months with an average delay usage of 14kWh.
I plan to replace my wife's hybrid with 15-20 kWh PHEV, install radiant heated floors in the bathrooms, install a 5kWh steam shower, and run my AC like a normal person once we are generating some electricity ourselves. My question is, should I wait a year for all these things to fall in place before I go solar (I need approval from SCE to stay on the grid with net metering), or should I have a small 3.1kW design installed now and expand the system when my demand increases? I could potentially see our daily demand going to 30kWh.
I've had one bid through SolarMax for a 12 panel, 3.1kw system. I've got about 2,000 sq ft of unobstructed 180 degree south facing roof with a 23 degree tilt…and another 900 sq ft of partially shaded (during the winter) flat roof in southern California. I'd say my house is a perfect candidate for solar electric generation.
I plan to replace my wife's hybrid with 15-20 kWh PHEV, install radiant heated floors in the bathrooms, install a 5kWh steam shower, and run my AC like a normal person once we are generating some electricity ourselves. My question is, should I wait a year for all these things to fall in place before I go solar (I need approval from SCE to stay on the grid with net metering), or should I have a small 3.1kW design installed now and expand the system when my demand increases? I could potentially see our daily demand going to 30kWh.
I've had one bid through SolarMax for a 12 panel, 3.1kw system. I've got about 2,000 sq ft of unobstructed 180 degree south facing roof with a 23 degree tilt…and another 900 sq ft of partially shaded (during the winter) flat roof in southern California. I'd say my house is a perfect candidate for solar electric generation.
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