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Why Tesla's New Solar Roof Tiles and Home Battery Are Such a Big Deal (techcrunch.com)

On October 28th, Tesla founder and CEO Elon Musk unveiled the residential "solar roof," consisting of glass roof tiles with integrated solar panels. Not only are they more durable than traditional roof panels, but they offer efficiency that is 98 percent as good as traditional, photovoltaic panels. The company also announced the Powerwall 2, a home battery that can store 14 kWh of energy, with a 5 kW continuous power draw, and 7 kW peak. It's designed to store the energy from the solar roof during day to power your home at night. Darrell Etherington via TechCrunch explains why these solar roof tiles are such a big deal: It's easy to dismiss the aesthetic import of how Tesla's tiles look, but it's actually important, and a real consideration for homeowners looking to build new homes or revamp their existing ones. The appearance of the tiles, which come in four distinct flavors (Textured Glass, Slate Glass, Tuscan Glass and Smooth Glass) is going to be a core consideration for prospective buyers, especially those at the top end of the addressable market with the disposable income available to do everything they can to ensure their home looks as good as it possibly can. As with other kinds of technologies that are looking to make the leap from outlier oddity to mainstream mainstay, solar has a hurdle to leap in terms of customer perception. Existing solar designs, and even so-called attempts to make them more consistent with traditional offerings like the above-mentioned Dow Chemical project, leave a lot to be desired in terms of creating something that can be broadly described as good-looking. Tesla has been referred to as the Apple of the automotive world by more than a few analysts and members of the media, and if there's one thing Apple does well, it's capitalize on the so-called -- halo effect. This is the phenomenon whereby customers of one of its lines of business are likely to become customers of some of the others; iPhone buyers tend to often go on to own a Mac, for instance. For Tesla, this represents an opportunity to jump-start its home solar business (which it'll take on in earnest provided its planned acquisition of SolarCity goes through) through the knock-on effects of its brisk Tesla EV sales, including the tremendous pre-order interest for the Model 3. Tesla's solar tiles claim to be able to power a standard home, and provide spare power via the new Powerwall 2 battery in case of inclement weather or other outages. Musk says that the overall cost will still be less than installing a regular old roof and paying the electric company for power from conventional sources. But Musk's claims about the new benefits of the new solutions don't end there. Tesla's tiles will actually be more resilient than traditional roofing materials, including terra-cotta, clay and slate tiles. Solar roofing, Powerwall and Tesla cars taken together represent a new kind of ecosystem in consumer tech, one that carries a promise of self-sufficiency in addition to ecological benefits. Tesla has already tipped its hand with respect to how it intends to make vehicle ownership a revenue generator for its drivers, rather than a cost center.

23 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Style by ChrisMaple · · Score: 4, Informative

    This summary is written like an advertisement, Please help slashdot's editors by rewriting it.

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  2. Ã(TM) by msauve · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ã(TM), Ã(TM), Ã(TM)

    What's up with that? Is Musk creating a new line of solar cash machines? Funny acronym.

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    1. Re:Ã(TM) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unicode failure.
      I dunno why slashdot is still stuck in the 90s and can't do unicode yet.
      Y'all had time to make the site unusable without javascript. What browser can't do unicode but can do javascript?

  3. Suspicious by freeze128 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I saw the announcement, and sure, the roofing tiles LOOKED nice, but there was absolutely no mention of their efficiency, or how they would connect to each other. Elon however did go out of his way to demonstrate that there was some kind of "micro-louvre" layer that hides the solar cell from view unless you're looking at it straight on. The people in the crowd clapped, and I just shook my head, because that would actually REDUCE the amount of sunlight it can be exposed to.

    Another demonstration was where they dropped a 10lb weight on each of the classic roofing tiles and then a solar tile. While the solar tile didn't shatter into shards like the other tiles did, I bet the underlying pv cell was no longer operational after that. Then you would have to either manually bypass it in the circuit, or replace it. Either way, if you're climbing up on the roof to do that, you might just as well replace it.

    My last concern is (as always) how would this system perform in a northern area. I live in Minnesota, where 1/3rd of the year is dark, and roofs are covered with feet of snow. We don't see a whole lot of Tesla automobiles here either. How does the new Powerwall 2 in your garage hold up to -20f degree winters?

    1. Re:Suspicious by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I live in Minnesota, where 1/3rd of the year is dark,

      Maybe it's not for you. If you live in Minnesota by choice, you may not be the target market for these solar panels.

      Here in Houston, they sound mighty good. Can you imagine? There are products that are appropriate for one place that are not for another? By the way, North Face down coats and mukluks are useless to me. They simply don't work here in Houston.

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    2. Re: Suspicious by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I lived in Houston for 23 years. I always wondered what a "winter coat" was. I tried wearing what I considered to be a winter coat in New England and barely made it thru October, before hitting -20F one January. On the other hand, there are houses here that don't have air conditioning...at all.

      I recently moved from New England to Houston, and let me tell you, it's a hell of a lot cheaper to air condition a house in the summer here than it is to heat a house in the winter there.

      And here it is, November 1, and I was watching the Cubs game in the back yard with tiki torches and lemonade. I thought I would hate Houston, but I really like it a lot. Plus, there are terrific taco trucks here. I mean, tacos that can make you weep. And people are really nice, unlike the people where I was in New England, who are insular, judgmental assholes.

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    3. Re: Suspicious by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And here it is, November 1, and I was watching the Cubs game in the back yard with tiki torches and lemonade. I thought I would hate Houston, but I really like it a lot.

      Don't worry. You will hate it next year, when the weather is more typical.

      Plus, there are terrific taco trucks here. I mean, tacos that can make you weep.

      You are in the land of tacos.

      And people are really nice, unlike the people where I was in New England, who are insular, judgmental assholes.

      Houston is not too bad, although a lot of those people are not actually nice. They are just playing nice. They would just as soon sell you up the river for a dollar. People pretending to be nice is slightly more pleasant, though.

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  4. UniTM'1(poop)code! by Chmarr · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's also easy to overlook the aesthetic impact of proper character encodings!

  5. Re:Tougher.... by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In a way that is largely irrelevant (impact of a heavy dense object), and entirely ignores the most common roofing material - asphalt shingles.

    Asphalt or fiberglass shingles aren't all that tough. In general, the higher the pitch of the roof, the longer they last. On a low pitch roof such as mine, 25 year shingles last 10-15 years. Just how it is. I've had branches come down and damage them. Get enough damage, and you better hope they still make the same color after a few years - uness you don't mind a trashy looking roof. Even the replacements you should buy - I have several bundles sitting in my shed, will look different for a few years. And having replaced my roof shingles twice since I bought my place - they aren't cheap.

    Quasi-permanent sounds damn good to me.

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  6. Caveats by fyngyrz · · Score: 5, Informative

    A few things.

    First, 5kw is a quarter the normal service normally provided. We have a 20 kw drop; that's normal. It's not about what you use normally, either, it's about the toaster, the vacuum, the frig, the freezer, the AC, etc. all kicking on at once. It happens -- don't think it doesn't. That's why there's a 100 amp main system breaker in your typical breaker box. 100 amps at 240 volts. 5kw is about 25 amps at 240 (yes, you almost certainly have a 240 system... there are two 120v legs, and some stuff in the house is on one, and some stuff is on the other. A few things -- dryers, electric stoves, AC systems, things like that -- are on both legs and actually use 240.)

    Second, that battery... that's an expensive component, and one with a decidedly limited lifetime. There's going to be an ongoing maintainance cost there, and you should factor it in if you aren't just going to be compulsively home-swapping. Same with current EV designs, for that matter.

    Third, watch out for microinverter-based designs. These place small inverters all over the solar cell system, typically one every panel or every few panels (in this case, it would X number of tiles, if it's a microinverter design.) Every installation that uses them that I've come across thus far is a horrific generator of radio frequency interference. It'll do everything from reduce your wifi and bluetooth ranges to blow out your AM and FM reception and anything else going on that actually uses, you know, radio. A quality installation has a central, single, high-quality, high-power inverter. Those shitty little "we do solar power cheap!" companies... there's a very good reason they're cheaper. Because the stuff they install is crapola.

    All you want coming from the roof / panel farm is well-filtered DC. Period.

    I would hope, given the size of the energy conversion systems in their vehicles, that they didn't go that way, or, that they broke new ground and built quality systems that are actually RF quiet. But it's something to keep in mind until we know more about these proposed systems.

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    1. Re:Caveats by david_bonn · · Score: 5, Informative

      That sounds good, but I've got an 8kw array, and I run a well pump, an electric hot water heater, a dryer, and a big sub-zero all at once just fine. Oh, and my in-floor heating system and too many computers.

    2. Re:Caveats by slashrio · · Score: 5, Informative

      I can go a long way with you with respect to micro-inverters, but what they do well is adapt to the individual panels that they serve. If one panel is shaded, or only dirty, and the whole string of PV panels is served by one power inverter, the total output can go down considerably and stay low until you clean that one panel.
      With micro-inverters however only the output of that one panel (or few panels) served by the micro-inverter will be reduced.

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    3. Re:Caveats by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Informative

      First, 5kw is a quarter the normal service normally provided. We have a 20 kw drop; that's normal.

      In the USA, we rate residential service in amperes at 240v, and we have either 100A or 200A. 200A is typical in the sticks, 100A is typical in the city.

      It's not about what you use normally, either, it's about the toaster, the vacuum, the frig, the freezer, the AC, etc. all kicking on at once. It happens -- don't think it doesn't.

      Even if all that stuff kicks on at once you won't get close to even 100A, let alone 200A. You'd have to add in the washer and dryer. I can run my whole house save for the hottub in a 40A envelope. I just did it yesterday during a power outage, with a 7kW constant/8.75kW peak generator. And that includes two water pumps, one 3/4 HP hot start and one 1/2 HP slow start. In order to get water to the house, we have to pump it out of the ground into a tank and then pump it again to make pressure. The big inductive appliances draw around 1.5kW while starting. Full lighting, two water pumps, fridge and chest freezer, my PC, my internet stuff and NAS on a UPS, and the 52" LCD/CCFL TV. That's actually more draw than the average residential household!

      5kW with a little bit of battery for overage will produce more than enough power to run the average household.

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    4. Re:Caveats by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      With micro-inverters however only the output of that one panel (or few panels) served by the micro-inverter will be reduced.

      They also reduce wiring costs for long runs by letting you ship mid-voltage AC instead of low-voltage DC...

      --
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    5. Re:Caveats by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      You failed to mention HVAC, though, and in hot climates this is overwhelmingly electric, and in colder climates heat pumps (including geo/ground-source) are electric. Heat pumps in particular often have resistance backups.

      This is all true, and it's the big reason why we have a larger service. I personally also have more equipment that draws plenty of power which I'd like to be able to use while I'm using all the other things, for example my table saw or my 3/4 HP drill press. And then there's the two batteries I'm charging at the moment...

      And I'm not sure what my 220 VAC oven draws...

      That is typically the beast, if you have one. I don't. I've got gas. It's also not necessary. For most of my childhood, the home oven was a 110VAC DeLonghi convection oven. You didn't even have to modify recipes, except that since it was a convection oven you didn't have to rotate things halfway through. You still had to flip things, but you didn't have to rotate a cookie sheet or what have you. This is what people are talking about when they say that there are numerous opportunities to improve efficiency. It's not just eliminating parasitic loads and adding insulation, though I have opinions on that too :)

      We do have AC, and my generator wouldn't run everything else and both AC units. (This is a rental with no central AC, so we have two window units.) It would probably run one of them. But in that season, outages are rare.

      The solution there, of course, is to improve energy efficiency. All new construction should be required to have passive solar elements, which is to say it should be correctly oriented and have correctly-designed overhangs. We should also institute some fairly serious insulation requirements, of the type which sadly cannot be satisfied by fiberglass. That stuff is annoying anyway :) But this is to directly address your point about AC.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  7. Where I live this might be great, but... by Streetlight · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I live in Colorado Springs, reported to be the second best place in the country for photovoltaic applications with 320 days of sunshine per year with moderate winter weather. However, we have one problem and that's hail propelled at 40 to 60 MPH (or greater speeds) down on roofs. It's great for the roofing businesses, but for glass roofs, likely not so good. I'm not talking about those little golf ball hail stones but hail stones the size of tennis balls building piles of hail two feet deep. An expensive glass roof should survive such a storm. I want to see the test results for such an event.

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    1. Re:Where I live this might be great, but... by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I would like to see the energy output from that glass tile before and after being hit. Just because the glass is bound up in some layers, preventing it from flying all over the place, does not mean it isn't broken and useless. Ever see a sheet of tempered glass that shatters, but stays in place?

      Additionally, I would like to see his test done with a dozen weights being dropped, since that is what the OP is describing as a common occurrence in his location.

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  8. Here's the deal about grid connect by bferrell · · Score: 4, Informative

    The grid operator/utility doesn't actually do business with the home owner. Home owners are too small for the effort involved. What the grid operator does business with is called an aggregation entity (Solar City etc). This is why the home owner still buys power at silly low rates.

    The aggregation entity does all the accounting and sells the energy the homeowner doesn't use or store to the grid operator at rates mandated by regulatory agencies. The sell rate to the home owner NOT regulated in any way, only the sell to the grid.

    That same entity is also involved in what are called rate up/rate down events. This is where the entity get's paid for being able to supply energy during peak loads OR more importantly absorbing and storing energy during excess generation periods. This is why the system having storage is important. Also of note, the home owner does NOT participate is revenues derived from rate up/rate down events.

  9. 1/3 of the year is dark by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 5, Funny

    >> I live in Minnesota, where 1/3rd of the year is dark

    Well that sounds like a perfect place to do solar! In all the places I've lived, it's dark a full half of the year - the locals call often call it "night".

  10. Re:I only wish by Locke2005 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm sure they are strong enough to walk on. I have a different worry: on a steep roof, they would be a lot more slippery than asphalt shingles, especially here in the northwest where is rain so much that moss grows on our roofs! Yes, it seems like you would need to pressure wash them several times a year to keep dirt from lowering their efficiency, so you would spend a lot more time cleaning off your roof. Asphalt tile, you basically pay someone $300 to pressure wash the roof every 8 years.

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  11. well filtered DC? by 4wdloop · · Score: 3, Informative

    DC filtered from what if there are no inverters?

    With small tiles that's a lot of wires even if several panels are connected in series.
    There are other benefits of micro-inverters, such as maximizing power generation per-panel and panel health monitoring.

    Besides to make a "quiet" powerful inverter it takes a lot of capacitance that is localized in single device. Costly repair?

    There are compromises both ways.

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  12. Re:Alright by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Solar FREAKIN' Roof Tiles!"

    "Now With LASERS!"

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  13. Re:Whats a power grid owner to do? by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 3, Insightful

    By making solar a competitive solution, the US has encouraged a competitive market for solar manufacturers, who are coming up with innovative products. Mass adoption can be trusted to drive down costs due to economies of scale. If you think that solar will eventually be viable, what is the problem with investing in it now?

    In the longest term, solar power seems like an inevitable necessity. The Sun supplies too much energy for it not to be a major component of our energy production. From that perspective, insisting on this technology spending another few decades as a laboratory curiosity (like fusion) seems a little shortsighted. Development is going to come faster if there's money to be made doing so. If that's the future we want, and we can afford the subsidy, we should continue to subsidize solar power.

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