Tesla solar panels
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BTW, Tesla makes minimum 20% gross margin on every Model 3 sold. Name another company that can do this with an EV right now with 200 plus mile range? I also don't see the big deal with using Tesla as a solar installer, especially if you are purchasing a PowerWall. A Powerwall for EV owners in California could make sense. My peak rate in summer is $0.49 per kWh. I could fully charge a Powerwall, dump the energy to the grid at almost $0.50 per kWh, and purchase a much smaller system with those credits.Leave a comment:
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As far as the solar roof tiles go I'm wondering how they approach the high number of connections required and how difficult it would be to locate and replace any failed/failing connections.Leave a comment:
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The manufacturer warranty is still in effect but to spend 300-500 every time something goes wrong on labor will destroy the ROI.
Re. Elon... people used to say the same kinds of things about Steve Jobs. The fact is that Elon has revolutionized The auto industry. He was the first to build an EV that isnLast edited by malba2366; 05-05-2019, 11:38 AM.Leave a comment:
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I don't like his public persona either. I know several people that work for him and their evaluation of his problem solving skills is what gives me confidence. Two of them are at SpaceEx and two of them are design engineers at Tesla Motors. I don't own the stock and I prefer local installers to do my solar installations.I don't put much faith in many installers being around in 20 years in that cut throat industry, especially in California with its mandated zero energy homes by 2020. I place more reliance on the manufacturers warranties.Leave a comment:
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Agree. All of the opinions above including mine are subjective opinions about whether the company will be around to honor their warranty. I believe they will. Just my two cents.Leave a comment:
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Selling more cars than another manufacturer is different then making more of a profit compared to other manufacturers. Tesla has yet to make a profit. But who knows they still may be around if enough customers plunked down their money to keep the company afloat.Leave a comment:
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The agents aren't really peddlers anymore... you have to order online and the agents are there just to provide info. They don't get commissions... I think that's part of the cost savings.
They will specify the equipment on the system design...no money besides a $99 refundable deposit is needed before then.
I would like to use a local company, but my main concern is that they can not survive to honor their warranties if they can't beat Tesla on price. Now that Tesla has made their pricing crystal clear they can't use the traditional arduous process to get a quote that is typical in the home improvement industry.Leave a comment:
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The agent I spoke to told me that they use whatever panels are available in the warehouse, and they usually use fronius inverters if no shading and solar edge with optimizer if there is shading. I was told that recent systems mostly use the Tesla/Panasonic panels. The agent told me that the equipment is specified in the final contract (before any real $$ is due) and that after the point they will not switch equipment without customer permission. I was told that if possible they will use the equipment a customer requests if it means closing the sale. There is only a $99 deposit that is fully refundable before equipment is specified so not a huge risk to at least see what they are offering. They also offer a production guarantee with payouts if the system underperforms...most solar companies I have talked to refuse to provide that. There is also the concern that many of the local companies will not be around to honor their 25 year labor warranties...while Tesla will at least be around to financially honor them even if they exit the solar panel business.
1.) You believe anything a peddler tells you ? Especially a SolarCity/Tesla peddler ? What you write about what you've been told with respect to equipment selection sounds pretty open ended anyway.
2.) Most reputable vendors will tell you what equipment they intend to use. Anyone ignorant enough to not care is leaving themselves open to trouble.
3.) Production guarantees are pretty standard as a sales tool used by most all vendors. They are of little use, mean less, and are for the most part impossible to use as a warranty claim for production shortfalls. The production bars are so low with so many exclusions you'll trip over them. I sincerely suggest you read a warranty claim and then reread it after you learn and understand what all the terms used in them mean. For many reasons, production warranties are a cynical joke and useless. The solar ignorant think they offer some protection. They (the production warranties) do not.
4.) Tesla may be around in 25 years but I kind of doubt it, at least not in its current iteration. To me, and for a lot of reasons, they're too leaky a vessel sailed by a yahoo captain to put much faith in.
5.) Something anecdotal: And this isn't a plug for Baker - just an example of one top vendor in my area (Baker) both sells and leases PV equipment. (A bit off topic - I wanted them to do my system based on the quality I observed them to be capable of, but their price was ~ 10 % higher than I wanted to pay.) They have ~ 11 leases in my HOA. All the Baker leases use Sunpower equipment and Sunpower leases. The average price for those leases is $0.02352/month per leased STC watt. SolarCity has leases of mongrel equipment put in by subcontractors who use labor that was probably roaming around the Big Box parking lot that morning. The average monthly payment for those leases is $.023693/month per leased STC watt. So, another example of how local quality beats the big national brands all the way around - price and quality. Baker's also been around a lot longer than SolarCity.
6.) More anecdotal: The only PV system the HOA has forced removal of was a Solar City system. I was a mess, in gross violation of the CC & R's and ARC guidelines, and the elderly mark was getting blatantly screwed. For starters, the system was under some trees.
7.) I appreciate selling PV is cut throat, but SolarCity has been about the most difficult, most unprofessional and IMO, most unethical of the 23 vendors I've dealt with in the 11 years I've been reviewing PV installs for my HOA. FWIW, the other big nationals, Vivant and Sun Run aren't far behind.
Take what you want of the above. Scrap the rest.Leave a comment:
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The agent I spoke to told me that they use whatever panels are available in the warehouse, and they usually use fronius inverters if no shading and solar edge with optimizer if there is shading. I was told that recent systems mostly use the Tesla/Panasonic panels. The agent told me that the equipment is specified in the final contract (before any real $$ is due) and that after the point they will not switch equipment without customer permission. I was told that if possible they will use the equipment a customer requests if it means closing the sale. There is only a $99 deposit that is fully refundable before equipment is specified so not a huge risk to at least see what they are offering. They also offer a production guarantee with payouts if the system underperforms...most solar companies I have talked to refuse to provide that. There is also the concern that many of the local companies will not be around to honor their 25 year labor warranties...while Tesla will at least be around to financially honor them even if they exit the solar panel business.Last edited by malba2366; 05-04-2019, 05:45 PM.Leave a comment:
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Tesla's price is $2.5 per watt in Pennsylvania and $2.85 in California. Tesla's panels are black and low price, but I'm not sure what kind of inverters they use.Leave a comment:
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Wow, that's a good price. Presumably this is with house brand panels (aka Panasonic Light from Buffalo, NY). I wonder what inverter they are offering.Leave a comment:
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