I'm new to this site, so Happy New Year to all!
Planning on updating my knowledge of Solar Systems this year, it's come a long way in the past 10 years.
1) Emergency back-up Solar Plant with Battery Back-up (non-Grid connected) - 2.5kWH/Day Max (x5 days Battery Reserve for Snow/Blizzards/Snow Storms, other random natural events or power shorts). In a real emergency, we would ration, and put Thinking to scale-up gradually here in terms of Battery System.
2) Max needed working presumptions: 12kWh/Day Winter to 18-20kWh/Day Peak summer (Grid vs Hybrid [latter is Grid Connectable]).
Question:
What are some good additional ways to make an assessment to size Solar Systems?
1) For emergency (want to take care of this first).
2) As new funds become available. Second task, is to tackle the full house system (most likely heavily experienced professional installer), for daily use (Hybrid- meaning off-grid direct use, with the option of Grid connecting with a licensed electrician).
Any suggestions for measuring Daytime vs 24hr use of Key High Amp/Volt appliances (Microwave, A/C, Electric Toaster Oven, and 25-40AMP Electricals like Dryer, Electrical Range, etc.?). I've looked at the Annual Usage (2yrs averages by Month and year). Looks like a 5-8% variance between years for me, even adjusted for Monthly average temp. Using a Kill-A-Watt, plug in, looked at what I thought were the big energy consumers (Refrigerator 1.3kWh/Day, freezer 0.8kWh/Day, couple of rooms (excluding lighting) 0.8kWh/Day, stereo/TV systems ).
Background:
So I've been looking at tons available information the past few months, following the devastation of 2012's Hurricane Sandy, in the North East. We all our lost power, and anyone lucky enough have or buy a fuel generator, couldn't get to a working gas pump. The lines for fuel were so long than the fuel stations ran out of fuel, before 1/2 of them even got to the station, so the cost/benefit is a moot issue in an emergency.
Planning on updating my knowledge of Solar Systems this year, it's come a long way in the past 10 years.
1) Emergency back-up Solar Plant with Battery Back-up (non-Grid connected) - 2.5kWH/Day Max (x5 days Battery Reserve for Snow/Blizzards/Snow Storms, other random natural events or power shorts). In a real emergency, we would ration, and put Thinking to scale-up gradually here in terms of Battery System.
2) Max needed working presumptions: 12kWh/Day Winter to 18-20kWh/Day Peak summer (Grid vs Hybrid [latter is Grid Connectable]).
Question:
What are some good additional ways to make an assessment to size Solar Systems?
1) For emergency (want to take care of this first).
2) As new funds become available. Second task, is to tackle the full house system (most likely heavily experienced professional installer), for daily use (Hybrid- meaning off-grid direct use, with the option of Grid connecting with a licensed electrician).
Any suggestions for measuring Daytime vs 24hr use of Key High Amp/Volt appliances (Microwave, A/C, Electric Toaster Oven, and 25-40AMP Electricals like Dryer, Electrical Range, etc.?). I've looked at the Annual Usage (2yrs averages by Month and year). Looks like a 5-8% variance between years for me, even adjusted for Monthly average temp. Using a Kill-A-Watt, plug in, looked at what I thought were the big energy consumers (Refrigerator 1.3kWh/Day, freezer 0.8kWh/Day, couple of rooms (excluding lighting) 0.8kWh/Day, stereo/TV systems ).
Background:
So I've been looking at tons available information the past few months, following the devastation of 2012's Hurricane Sandy, in the North East. We all our lost power, and anyone lucky enough have or buy a fuel generator, couldn't get to a working gas pump. The lines for fuel were so long than the fuel stations ran out of fuel, before 1/2 of them even got to the station, so the cost/benefit is a moot issue in an emergency.
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