I'm new to this forum; new to solar for that matter. In January I saw an article in the local paper about no-down solar leases coming to Oregon.
I went to SolarCity's website, plugged my info in and someone called back the same day. They sent a preliminary design and 4 different quotes. Overall, it sounded like a great deal so we signed up. The system was installed last week. Now I am eagerly waiting for the city inspection and utility inspection before we can turn it on.
Here's what we got:
* 26 230W Yingli modules
* 2 Fronius IG Plus inverters
* SolarGuard monitoring
* Equipment warranty for life of lease (including expectation of replacing inverters after 10 years)
* Damage and theft insurance for life of lease
* Reinforced roof from within attic
* Performance guarantee. 5,408 KWH guaranteed first year. 4,698 KHW guaranteed 15th year. Guaranteed energy price per kWh is $0.090.
* Output warranty. The output during the 1st 10 years will not decrease by more than 15%
* Option to renew lease for up to 10 years in two 5 year renewal periods.
Here's what we paid:
* Initial payment is $2,370
* Monthly payment of $19.22. It is fixed and does not increase over time.
* Oregon has a $6,000 tax credit that is applied over 4 years ($1,500 each year). SolarCity can't receive this directly from the state so we agreed to send them $1,000 of it each year. So of the $6,000 SolarCity will get $4,000 and we will get $2,000.
We did not get an option to purchase the system prior to the lease term.
We currently pay $0.06778 for the first 1,000 kWh, $0.075 after that, plus $0.00235 transmission charge, and also a $0.3116 distribution charge. There's also a bunch of adjustments after that to convolute things and make you not know exactly what you are paying. Our electric bill for last month was $150.
The system looks very impressive. 13 modules face south, 13 face west. Each string is connected to a separate inverter. SolarCity monitors each inverter separately. I am eager to see how the output for the southern facing modules compares to the western facing modules.
I can't help but think this is an outstanding deal and have no problems in recommending a lease (such as ours) to others. If someone disagrees, please enlighten me. I'd like to know what we've gotten ourselves into and don't want to refer others to SolarCity if this really isn't an outstanding deal.
Thanks.
-Chris
I went to SolarCity's website, plugged my info in and someone called back the same day. They sent a preliminary design and 4 different quotes. Overall, it sounded like a great deal so we signed up. The system was installed last week. Now I am eagerly waiting for the city inspection and utility inspection before we can turn it on.
Here's what we got:
* 26 230W Yingli modules
* 2 Fronius IG Plus inverters
* SolarGuard monitoring
* Equipment warranty for life of lease (including expectation of replacing inverters after 10 years)
* Damage and theft insurance for life of lease
* Reinforced roof from within attic
* Performance guarantee. 5,408 KWH guaranteed first year. 4,698 KHW guaranteed 15th year. Guaranteed energy price per kWh is $0.090.
* Output warranty. The output during the 1st 10 years will not decrease by more than 15%
* Option to renew lease for up to 10 years in two 5 year renewal periods.
Here's what we paid:
* Initial payment is $2,370
* Monthly payment of $19.22. It is fixed and does not increase over time.
* Oregon has a $6,000 tax credit that is applied over 4 years ($1,500 each year). SolarCity can't receive this directly from the state so we agreed to send them $1,000 of it each year. So of the $6,000 SolarCity will get $4,000 and we will get $2,000.
We did not get an option to purchase the system prior to the lease term.
We currently pay $0.06778 for the first 1,000 kWh, $0.075 after that, plus $0.00235 transmission charge, and also a $0.3116 distribution charge. There's also a bunch of adjustments after that to convolute things and make you not know exactly what you are paying. Our electric bill for last month was $150.
The system looks very impressive. 13 modules face south, 13 face west. Each string is connected to a separate inverter. SolarCity monitors each inverter separately. I am eager to see how the output for the southern facing modules compares to the western facing modules.
I can't help but think this is an outstanding deal and have no problems in recommending a lease (such as ours) to others. If someone disagrees, please enlighten me. I'd like to know what we've gotten ourselves into and don't want to refer others to SolarCity if this really isn't an outstanding deal.
Thanks.
-Chris
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