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Switching To Solar Power – One Month Later

ThinSkin writes "After an interesting article on solar panel installation for the home, Loyd Case at ExtremeTech has written a follow-up after about a month of normal use. Posting an $11.34 electric bill (roughly 3% of previous months), Loyd shares his experiences using solar power and how it can be fun for the geek, with computer monitoring services and power generation data. Of course, solar power isn't all fun and games, given the amount of required maintenance — even unpredictable maintenance, like wiping off accumulated ash from fires in Northern California."

22 of 730 comments (clear)

  1. My PC is running great on solar power ... by krkhan · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... even though it was raining cats and dogs today. I'm still using it withou

  2. Why can't he sell it back? by deanoaz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to the article California will not allow homeowners to sell more power back into the grid than they are buying. He doesn't say why. I don't understand the reasoning for such a restriction, since the possibility of selling more than you buy would encourage wider adoption.

    --
    If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
    1. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by Delwin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Because their billing structure would put the power company out of business if they allowed it.

      Note that while can't go net negative for the year he can get to net 0. Also note that he's 'selling' back power to get to that net 0 at retail rates.

      The places that allow you to go net negative buy your power back at wholesale rates, which is far lower. If you think about it when you sell power back to the power company you're not competing with the power company, you're competing with the power generators. Why should the power company give you an unfair advantage there?

    2. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by Klaus_1250 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Why should the power company give you an unfair advantage there?

      Lower costs for the power-company in terms of transmission and distribution of power (and related costs for that infrastructure). E.g. the power you produce can go right to your next door neighbor. Power from a power station usually has to travel quite a bit.

      --
      It only takes one man to change the Wisdom of the Crowd to Tyranny of the Masses.
    3. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As the cost of energy plummets from the commodity rate (where you pay for every watt-hour/gallon consumed) to the ... investment level (where you pay once, and for irregular maintenance), individuals will have a lot more time on their hands...

      People in third world nations spend a MUCH higher proportion of their total work/income on securing food and energy than we do in the western world. If all you cared about was providing for your basic needs, you could work 10 hours a week, or just sit at home and collect welfare. There are many reasons why people work as much as they do, but the cost of energy has little to do with it. Most of us work because we either find enjoyment in the work itself, or because we want to splurge on luxuries, AND be able to make a statement about our earning ability. Why do you think guys buy expensive cars, and women like wearing flashy jewelry? Because the cost of electricity is so high that it's forcing everyone to buy shiny objects? Don't be a friggin' idiot.

      Government revenues will fall like a rock. With people working less, income taxes receipts will fall like a brick.

      Your ignorance of economic principles is truly mind-numbing.

      I'm sure there are other problems with Energy Liberation, but these are just the three I've been thinking about...

      The word "thinking" doesn't really belong in that sentence ....

    4. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by K.os023 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Try Europe where you can get 35 hour work weeks and 35% unemployment.

      I guess that the statistics would disagree, but why let facts get in your way!

      --
      Ahhh, what an awful dream. Ones and zeroes everywhere... and I thought I saw a two.
    5. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It still doesn't make sense to pay you the same rate that you pay them.

      Consider the situation where you produce as much as you consume, but not at the same time. Imagine, for the sake of argument, that you produce lots of power during the day, and then use lots of power during the night, such that the two are equal. Your net power use is therefore 0, but you're pushing lots of electricity to the grid during the day and pulling a lot at night.

      Should your bill be zero?

      I would argue that it should not. The power company is still maintaining the transmission lines, is still running the generation plants that you rely on at night, and the electricity you're giving them is not going to completely make up for that. The power company in this case is acting as a middleman, in the good sense, in that they ensure that stuff gets to where it needs to be. Middlemen can only make money, and thus provide their service, if the producers charge less money than the consumers pay.

      Now, it may very well make sense in a broader political sense to make the rates be the same in order to encourage exactly this sort of independent generating capacity, but from the limited point of view of the economics of electrical generation and distribution, the rates should not be equal.

      --
      If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
    6. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      hahahahaha, oh man you can't be serious. We all know how effective the government has been at all of those things....

      Well, hasn't it? The Roads, Libraries, and Utilities seem to be working just fine under government regulation, at least here in California. Schools are uneven -- some are very good (e.g. most public colleges and universities, and some elementary schools and high schools). Health Care is lousy, but it's the privatized portion that's lousy. The public portion (Medicare, etc) works as advertised.

      I think some people are so deep into their cynicism about governmental incompetence that they rarely stop to check if their cynicism is borne out by the facts...

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    7. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by maxume · · Score: 5, Informative

      Grid tie equipment is required to have automatic disconnection systems. Also, the linemen can pretty much wave a wand at the lines to see if they are live or not...

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    8. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Interesting

      IBM makes me work 60 hours a week. You see, my employment is contingent on something called utilization. My target and tenure is such that I can't meet my target unless I work 60 hours a week.

      The utilization target is computed without taking into account vacations, holidays, and sick days. If I take all 3 weeks of vacation I've earned, then I won't make my utilization target, and I won't have a job.

      It's time to fucking unionize the place. Or if that doesn't work, I'll just continue slacking for 60 hours a week. IBM gets an honest 30 hours out of me whether they know it or not. Fuck them.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    9. Re:Why can't he sell it back? by TheLink · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's not whether it's privatized or not. It's whether it's _corrupt_ or not.

      If you have a big corrupt government, your money and freedoms go to the corrupt government.
      Of you have a small corrupt government, your money and freedoms go to some big corrupt company that bribes the small corrupt government.

      Either way you end up being screwed.

      You get all those libertarian fools thinking "Oh if the current big bad government is smaller, things would be wonderful".

      Then you get the other fools thinking "Oh the current big bad government (that's already screwing me) should expand its role to take care of this".

      It's not how big or small. It's how BAD or GOOD. When voters vote based on big or small, and not good or bad, what do you think they'll get?

      If you have a good government, and it knows it has the ability to do "Natural Monopoly X" well (and will continue to do so for near future), nothing wrong with it doing X - after all it is supposedly answerable to the voters in a democracy. If it realizes it does not have the ability, it can get some company (or more) to do it, and if the government lacks the ability to even know whether the company is doing a good job or not it can appoint a regulator to do that.

      Lastly if just because Company X gives lots of money to Candidate Y, means people vote for Candidate Y, then people sure are stupid. In the absence of Diebolded elections, you don't have to vote that way. If Coke and Pepsi are the biggest advertisers it shouldn't mean you continue drinking either Coke or Pepsi if both are bad for you.

      When voters vote based on how much money Candidates get from companies, guess what they get?

      So far it sure looks like voters have got what they have been voting for.

      Maybe in the future companies like Diebold will save voters the trouble.

      --
  3. Re:haha by negRo_slim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    trix are for kids mutherfucker!

    That's right and responsible energy use is for adults. I like to see things like this, and as some might decry the amount of involvement one must provide to effectively commit to a project along similar lines. Though I personally think people (especially in the U.S.) could really benefit from having to be more involved in the production and usage of the energy they consume.

    --
    On the Oregon Cost born and raised, On the beach is where I spent most of my days
  4. Eh by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 5, Informative

    So he saved about $330/month. It cost him $36K (which really cost $50K, but let's say). So it'll take 109 months to get back the money, or 9 years, not adjusting for inflation and investment opportunity cost. Let's say that brings it up to 12 years. Not including maintenance and repairs. It might even need complete replacement at that point. At 50K, which is the real cost, we're talking more like 16-18 years.

    That's still a bit too long an investment for this to be really practical. Prices need to come down to about a four year payoff before I'd be really interested.

    On another subject, I'm kind of glad to see someone who actually uses more electricity than I do. :)

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    1. Re:Eh by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 5, Informative

      No way a panel will last 16-18 years.. Try 2-3. You've got to factor in the price of complete replacecement. Hell, lets say he gets really lucky and they last 10 years.. he's still making a net loss.

      From the Article:

      These particular panels were guaranteed to deliver 90% of their rated peak capacity for at the twelve year mark, and 80% at the 25 year mark.

  5. Re:Solar is not a good choice if you want to save by cassius2002 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Residential solar installations typically have no batteries, so there is no maintenance cost for batteries, nor replacement costs. This type of installation uses the grid as a kind of giant battery, feeding power to the grid during the day and drawing from the grid at night.

  6. Re:Questions? (Answers) by Surt · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. They are somewhat heavy (50 lbs). They are awkwardly large at 5ftx3ft. Two person job if you don't want to risk a rooftop fall.

    2. They are typically bolted on. Uninstall time will be in the several minutes per panel range. Be sure you have an electrician with you to avoid death by electric shock.

    3. You can see in the pictures he has a typical roof. Bring a ladder. And a crane if you want an easier time lowering the panels.

    4. Yes, see the pictures.

    5. Don't know about that one. Probably end of December or next summer.

    6. Doubtful.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  7. Insane energy usage. by SuperQ · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yea, I was shocked at how much energy the family in this article uses. My GF and I average ~370kWh/month, 4,440kWh/year. We live in Mountain View, which is the next small city over from Sunnyvale. The family in this article is using 17,400kWh/year. If he expects a 20% drop in usage when the family becomes 2 people, that's still THREE TIMES what we use. I also have a home server and network.

  8. my experience after 1 year by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By coincidence, today is the day I got my first yearly bill for my new photovoltaic system. Where I live (Orange County, CA, with Southern California Edison as my utility), people who have residential PV systems get billed yearly rather than monthly. A year is also pretty much the minimum amount of time for which you need data in order to find out how your system is performing, since both your energy production and your energy use fluctuate seasonally.

    My bill for this year was $353.63. The system is nominally 4.4 kW, and cost $28k after rebate. It's covering about 90% of our use, which was almost exactly what we shot for -- if we produce more than we use over 12 months, they don't pay us for the excess.

    People always want to know the number of years until the system pays for itself. Basically that's utterly impossible to predict. There's a reason that they exclude energy from the consumer price index -- it's because energy prices are extremely volatile. If the increased price of fossil fuels starts to be reflected in the cost of electricity, then I'm going to look like a financial genius. The other thing that's completely unknowable is how fast the technology will progress. If there's a breakthrough in technology five years from now, and the price of panels per kilowatt comes down by a factor of two, then I'll wish I'd waited. It's also kind of funny hearing the quick-buck psychological attitude a lot of Americans have toward investing money in something like this; from the way people talk, you'd think they were going to take that money that could have gone into photovoltaics and invest it in some kind of magical pixie dust that was guaranteed to pay a steady 20% annually until the end of time. And finally, beware of anyone making blanket statements about whether PV is ready for prime time or not. It completely depends on factors like the price of electricity in your area, which way your roof faces, your latitude, the amount of cloudy weather, and the amount of shade. PV is like Linux: it's ready for prime time for some people, and it's not ready for prime time for other people.

  9. Re:Rookie mistake by krkhan · · Score: 5, Funny

    I did turn the backup generator on but it somehow failed during commissioning. It isn't easy maintaining a beowulf clusters of generators, ya'know.

  10. Re:Do the math -- is he really saving money? by bcrowell · · Score: 5, Informative

    He says he put in $36,000 and will save $3,300 per year in payments to the power company. Now the historical annual rate of return of an S&P 500 index fund is 11.3% over the last century, so $36K put there would return over $4,000 -- enough to pay the $3,300 to the grid, have $700 left over and of course, still keeping the principal.
    You're comparing apples and oranges here. If people always invested solely based on maximizing the expected average rate of return, then bank CDs wouldn't exist, bonds wouldn't exist, real estate and REITs wouldn't exist, etc. In reality, people are balancing the expected rate of return against variability. The reason bank CDs are paying something pathetic like 4% right now is that the banks have to guarantee that they'll pay you 4% on your money. The bank is essentially charging you for insurance against negative variability. Although there are a lot of unknowns involved in buying PV (what will electric rates do in the future? how much will the technology improve), they're a lot less than the unknowns involved in stocks. My S&P 500 index fund is down 19% from its peak value last year. There's a reason that most people build a balanced investment portfolio that includes both stocks and bonds; it's because mixing volatile and nonvolatile investments is a way of maximizes your expected rate of return for a given amount of risk that you're willing to accept.

    And grid power might go up, but only so far. Because eventually the grid power hits the solar price, and the grid itself starts putting in solar sources at that price -- because it's cheaper.
    Your logic doesn't work. When you own a PV system, you're part of "the grid itself." When I'm at work during the day, my PV panels are pumping energy into the grid, which is selling it to other customers. In my area, grid power has hit the solar price, for a south-facing roof with no shade; that's why I, a homeowner with a south-facing roof and no shade, have put in a PV system. You seem to be assuming that if rates go above a certain threshold, the entire state of California will suddenly magically cover itself with PV panels, because that will be the right thing to do according to the laws of supply and demand. That doesn't make sense, for a couple of reasons. First, there are huge variations in the price of land, the local cost of electricity, the amount of sunlight, which way people's roofs face, and how much shade they get. Second, there's a barrier to covering every house with PV panels, which is that most homeowners are short on capital. Your idea that the whole grid would suddenly go solar at some threshold is like imagining that everybody will suddenly drive a hydrogen-powered car if gas goes over $6 a gallon. We're talking about a massive infrastructure that doesn't change overnight.

  11. Another data point by skidisk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I put a 3kw system on my roof in February, 2005. (I live in Silicon Valley). My electricity bill has been zero since then -- well, actually, $60/yr in some fee PG&E charges. My total electricity cost for the previous three years (2002-2004) was $6,730. Installation of the solar panels cost a net of $13,369 after rebates. So I've saved 50% of the cost already, and my house is worth more due to the presence of the solar power array. I took advantage of California rebates which were higher then than now, though, so that's a bummer.

  12. solarnetwork.net by FriedmannSolution5 · · Score: 5, Informative

    in terms of measuring live solar data, there's an open source project at: http://www.solarnetwork.net/ that is collecting and charting live data from Outback, MorningStar and Xantrex devices. let me know if anyone has an interest in participating, or leave a note on the site. thanks!