California made some really big changes to state laws regarding ADU's (Accessory Dwelling Unit), making it MUCH easier for people to add a small house onto their existing residential property.
We're in the process of evaluating a few companies (sonderpods and habitat adu) to have a pre-manufactured 750 sq. ft. unit placed onto our yard.
These units are 100% electric, including a HeatPump hot water heater & mini-split HVAC.
... but it will cost $8,000 to run electricity (240 v) to this new "house"!
Well, here's the BIG Question:
I'm wondering if I should allocate that $8k from running a whole new line, and put it towards a battery/inverter system instead?
Another idea: Could I "trickle charge" a battery system with a 120 v, 20 amp circuit that is already close to the unit (so, still avoiding the $8k for the new service line) to a battery / inverter system that could then run the entire house? For example, it would trickle-charge 24/7 on 120v, but then be able to provide massive power bursts throughout the day.
I think there would be lots of ways to do this, but seeing the new videos for the BLUETTI EP500 got me thinking, "Hey, I could buy two of these units and a handful of solar panels for less than running a new electrical line... and BONUS, it would provide backup power during a blackout."
Really looking forward to your guys' thoughts!
We're in the process of evaluating a few companies (sonderpods and habitat adu) to have a pre-manufactured 750 sq. ft. unit placed onto our yard.
These units are 100% electric, including a HeatPump hot water heater & mini-split HVAC.
... but it will cost $8,000 to run electricity (240 v) to this new "house"!
Well, here's the BIG Question:
I'm wondering if I should allocate that $8k from running a whole new line, and put it towards a battery/inverter system instead?
Another idea: Could I "trickle charge" a battery system with a 120 v, 20 amp circuit that is already close to the unit (so, still avoiding the $8k for the new service line) to a battery / inverter system that could then run the entire house? For example, it would trickle-charge 24/7 on 120v, but then be able to provide massive power bursts throughout the day.
I think there would be lots of ways to do this, but seeing the new videos for the BLUETTI EP500 got me thinking, "Hey, I could buy two of these units and a handful of solar panels for less than running a new electrical line... and BONUS, it would provide backup power during a blackout."
Really looking forward to your guys' thoughts!
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