X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • astroboy
    replied
    Originally posted by scrambler
    Are they detailing the rest of the 18k quote (the $900 missing from below total)?
    $13000 + $1100 + $500 + $2500 = $17,100
    yes - it's the taxes which i didn't include because i'm sure that varies by county

    Leave a comment:


  • scrambler
    replied
    Are they detailing the rest of the 18k quote (the $900 missing from below total)?
    $13000 + $1100 + $500 + $2500 = $17,100
    Last edited by scrambler; 10-20-2019, 07:50 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • astroboy
    replied
    i don't have a single powerwall quote at this point, but they are quoting $500 for the permitting (which i assume would be the same) and $2500 for installation (which is probably actually similar to a 1-powerwall install since the hard part would seem to me installing a 2nd panel and moving all the circuits over), plus taxes.

    so at worst it would be $6500 + $1100 + $500 + $2500 = $10,600 plus tax, which i guess is just on the $7600 worth of equipment.

    Leave a comment:


  • scrambler
    replied
    Originally posted by astroboy
    well, i pulled the trigger. decided not to gamble on SGIP and just go tesla direct. fully anticipating them telling me i can only have 1 powerwall since the install will almost certainly take place in 2020.
    If you have it, can you share the Tesla quote for a single Powerwall installed as I suppose a partial backup, so including installing a protected load subpanel?

    18K for two Powerwall looks pretty steep
    2 PWW: $13,000
    Gateway: $1,100
    Misc (wiring, subpanel...): $1000
    TOTAL material:$15,100
    Leaves $2,900 for labor which seems pretty steep for a 2 person day job...
    Last edited by scrambler; 10-20-2019, 07:05 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • astroboy
    replied
    yes i believe one gateway can serve multiple powerwalls, so that is OK. from what i've read at the tesla forums, the state of california has new fire codes for 2020 which state that you may not hang more than 20kwh of battery on your house - instead the batteries need to be on pedestals some distance from the house. there's at least one person in san francisco for whom the city has decided to enforce this early, and they won't sign off on the final inspection even though the install (2 powerwalls) is complete and it's still 2019.

    tesla are asking around $18k for two powerwalls, while 3rd parties are in the $21-23k range. they're just marking up the price by the anticipated SGIP rebate, even though everyone is on the waitlist right now until sometime mid-2020 when the state is expected to replenish the funding. regardless, tesla has already reached their 'developer cap' so they can not apply for SGIP funds even if the money was available.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ampster
    replied
    Originally posted by astroboy
    well, i pulled the trigger. decided not to gamble on SGIP and just go tesla direct. fully anticipating them telling me i can only have 1 powerwall since the install will almost certainly take place in 2020.
    Do you think that is an inventory restriction on Tesla's part? From what I understand of the pricing is the first one includes the gateway which is not needed for a second PowerWall. Is that your understanding?

    Leave a comment:


  • astroboy
    replied
    well, i pulled the trigger. decided not to gamble on SGIP and just go tesla direct. fully anticipating them telling me i can only have 1 powerwall since the install will almost certainly take place in 2020.

    Leave a comment:


  • astroboy
    replied
    admittedly i am one of these people - i have been thinking about this for a long time but the PSPS made me revisit the idea. at least back in 2015 i had at least 3-4 companies that were interested in installing panels on my house but 4 years ago is a lifetime around here.

    Leave a comment:


  • scrambler
    replied
    Originally posted by astroboy

    a bigger problem for me seems to be that i can't find anyone to install one of these. one of the bigger companies in the bay area just shined me on and the company that installed my solar has not gotten back to me. probably nobody needs any new business. and if these new fire code rules are real, i won't be able to install more than 1 powerwall in 2020.
    I think the last batch of Programmed outages from PG&E is not helping with that.
    Solar installers in the Bay Area have a history of skimming the market, and this is not going to help...

    Leave a comment:


  • scrambler
    replied
    Remember the Powerwall has two modes dedicated to be as smart as possible in maximizing this.

    Advanced Time based Control Balanced, and Advanced Time Based Control Cost saving


    I think you can trust them to manage the system for your lower cost of operation while meeting SGIP requirement

    Leave a comment:


  • astroboy
    replied
    ok i misunderstood but regardless they are only saying you need to discharge the equivalent of a full battery approx once per week. my point being that the rest of the time if you want to keep the energy as backup, you can do that.

    however at least on some TOU plans it does make sense to charge the battery during partial peak times and then self-consume during peak times so that you can export 100% of your solar to the grid. i don't know if in my case that would be more or less than the requirement for SGIP, i have not run the numbers for my own system.

    a bigger problem for me seems to be that i can't find anyone to install one of these. one of the bigger companies in the bay area just shined me on and the company that installed my solar has not gotten back to me. probably nobody needs any new business. and if these new fire code rules are real, i won't be able to install more than 1 powerwall in 2020.
    Last edited by astroboy; 10-16-2019, 12:13 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ampster
    replied
    Originally posted by astroboy

    it's not so terrible though - i think they want you to push your full battery capacity back to the grid 52 times per year... so that's the equivalent of one full cycle per week.
    ..........
    Butch is correct, I think the regulation says that the battery from must be charged 75% of the time from solar.
    Last edited by Ampster; 10-16-2019, 08:29 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • ButchDeal
    replied
    Originally posted by astroboy
    i think they want you to push your full battery capacity back to the grid 52 times per year...
    The battery power should NEVER be pushed to the grid. What the incentives and rules are designed to do is get owners to cycle the battery for the homes use, thus avoiding grid use.

    Leave a comment:


  • astroboy
    replied
    Originally posted by solardreamer

    My understanding is that SGIP was specifically designed to discourage people getting batteries mainly for backup power usage. I think there is a requirement to cycle batteries regularly (almost daily?) and Tesla forces that on PW2 which probably shortens battery life. In general, PW2 seems too restrictive to me, it's kind of like having a condo vs a house. You can own a condo but only have limited control of it.
    it's not so terrible though - i think they want you to push your full battery capacity back to the grid 52 times per year... so that's the equivalent of one full cycle per week.

    it's true that you have limited control; i don't like that but on the other hand it's a fully turnkey solution.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ampster
    replied
    Originally posted by astroboy
    i am on NEM-1 - PTO in november 2015. which is why it looks like i only have until november 2020 to stay on EV-A. EV2-A, at least according to my scripts, will take my yearly bill from +/- $200 to +$1200 per year. E-TOU-B would bring me to like $800 per year and E-TOU-A like $900 per year. as far as i can tell NEM-2 is pretty much the same as NEM-1 except that they get to charge you a one-time $150 interconnection fee... does that sound right to you?
    Yes, the only thing I would add is that NEM 2 also includes Non Bypassable charges. That tips the scales a little more in favor of a Powerwall because you can save on those by not using grid power as much. The NBCs only amount to $0.03 per kWhr but depending on your timing of consumption it could shorten the payback slightly.
    also from reading around it sounds like installing powerwalls would let them force me onto NEM-2.
    I don't think that is true because a person I have known seven years is still on NEM 1 and he got a Powerwall with SGIP money. He has a very restrictive generating limit in his SGIP agreement.
    my idea was actually more radical than just the peak/partial-peak load shifting. because i didn't do enough reading at the tesla forum, i thought that i would be able to do off-peak to peak load shifting with the powerwall, at least for this last year while there's a 30 cent spread between the two on EV-A. however, 1) PGE explicitly forbids this and only lets you export as much energy as your solar plant would make, 2) tesla won't let you charge the PW2 from the grid, and 3) you can't claim the federal ITC (and certainly not the SGIP rebate) if you are charging from the grid. with some creative accounting i thought maybe i could claim the 26% ITC in 2020 but that might have been a stretch.

    but it turns out what you describe here is the only option - to load shift between peak and partial peak. i guess i'd have to model how this would really work money-wise. i suppose as long as the powerwall lets you keep exporting energy at peak it could still pay off (especially if you are running your house from the partial-peak power stored in the battery and exporting all the solar during peak) but the deltas would seem to be pretty incremental. even if the PW2 cost is reduced by the state and federal incentives it will still take a very long time to pay for itself thru load-shifting.
    Yes, as far as the powerwall is concerned there is only that option. However, if you don't need the ITC, you could buy a hybrid inverter, charge it off peak at $0.15 and offset your loads during peak. That differential is attractive in the summer when there is a $0.35 differential between off peak and on peak. Less so in the winter or during mid peak. You also have to account for inverter and charging losses and long term cost of batteries. If you buy a bimodal/hybrid inverter that is capable of AC coupling then you can leverage your existing grid tie solar. In many cases you don't need to buy solar panels to run many hybrid inverters.
    since i'm interested in the PW2 primarily for backup power, and the incentives are targeted at self-generation and grid supplanting, my goals and the state's are kind of at odds. but it doesn't matter since tesla essentially forces you to operate the powerwalls in a mode that's aligned with what the state wants. so i might as well try to get the credits, although it does seem like the SGIP is getting harder and harder to claim. based on the SGIP spreadsheets it seems like the installers in my area might already be on step 3
    The State's goals have resulted in so much solar that the Independent System Operator is actually curtailing some large renewable energy generation during the morning when solar ramps up. If this eventually results in some pricing mechanism that encourages people to put load on the grid when renewables are being curtailed then it might be a different ballgame. There is some talk of Tesla selling aggregate load (Powerwalls charging from the grid) in some scheme to reduce curtailment of renewables. That would be consistent with the State's goals. This is all pie in the sky talk but to me the key is to build a system that is flexible.

    Leave a comment:

Working...