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What a great discussion, thanks Nap for that analysis, it is really interesting.
Silver, are you saying that your est and actual for Jan were pretty close? I didn't take the time to add up all the numbers from the individual days, does your meter give you a reading for that?
Just curious to know as I am still in the planning stage, and in East SD County which I believe has weather similar to yours.
Thanks!
sun2.gifComment
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What a great discussion, thanks Nap for that analysis, it is really interesting.
Silver, are you saying that your est and actual for Jan were pretty close? I didn't take the time to add up all the numbers from the individual days, does your meter give you a reading for that?
Just curious to know as I am still in the planning stage, and in East SD County which I believe has weather similar to yours.
Thanks!
[ATTACH=CONFIG]3697[/ATTACH]Comment
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Those are great results.
The installers I've contacted so far seem to have their favorite panels, ranging from 245 to 270W per panel. I'm not sure how the distribution works -- it seems like some installers are more flexible than others on the panels. What was your experience on that? Did they offer you the Bosch or did you find them yourself?
In any case, you really made out with that crazy low price.
I had an early flurry of activity but have been super busy the last several days and have just let things rest for the most part.Comment
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Those are great results.
The installers I've contacted so far seem to have their favorite panels, ranging from 245 to 270W per panel. I'm not sure how the distribution works -- it seems like some installers are more flexible than others on the panels. What was your experience on that? Did they offer you the Bosch or did you find them yourself?
In any case, you really made out with that crazy low price.
I had an early flurry of activity but have been super busy the last several days and have just let things rest for the most part.
2014 is still new, keep shopping among good installers. I have seen SMX panels + SMA @ $3.2 per WattsComment
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Thanks for that, Silver. My thought process is similar to yours -- eg. possibly an electric car in the future. The tenant in my rear unit recently bought a Volt which he can charge at work for free. My mom's house is around 2700sf and with 4BR 3BA and is suitable for a family. Who knows who might live there in the future.
"Oversizing" seems to be a subject about which people are passionate on this site, with most people dead set against it.
Most of us are here to learn and I suppose a good healthy discussion will promote that.
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[QUOTE=silversaver;98143After months of reseach, I don't think any panel were superior than others, unless limited roof spacing, [/QUOTE]
Really true in most cases. You should look for (these datas are from Sunpower panels) -
1) Power Tolerance +5/–0% +5/–0% - many will have a negative tolerance - plan on the output being closer to the minimum than the max.
2) Power Temp Coef. (Pmpp) –0.30% / oC - some have a significantly higher loss of production when hot and your roof will be hot
3) UL listed or equivalent
4) Warranty terms and length - is a 3rd party guaranteeing the warranty in the event the manufacturer goes under?
Others can add as they wish.
Russ[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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Regarding oversizing now to save on repeat cost of permits and fees, Naptown has shared with us some good info about the cost, and it looks like the structural study and drawing cost is the lion share of it ($1200-$1500) out of $1700 total. But I really wonder if a structural study is required in all cases or not. I really doubt that one was done for my installation because I didn't see any evidence of it, while I see all evidence of all other kinds of paperwork. Maybe there's some easy criteria that determines whether a structural study is required or not, and in most cases, it's not for a normal home roof top.Comment
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Really true in most cases. You should look for (these datas are from Sunpower panels) -
1) Power Tolerance +5/–0% +5/–0% - many will have a negative tolerance - plan on the output being closer to the minimum than the max.
2) Power Temp Coef. (Pmpp) –0.30% / oC - some have a significantly higher loss of production when hot and your roof will be hot
3) UL listed or equivalent
4) Warranty terms and length - is a 3rd party guaranteeing the warranty in the event the manufacturer goes under?
Others can add as they wish.
Since SunPower offering 25 years, so you will get your panels covered since no way you can match SunPower panels with other makes if panels were bad. On the other hand, most of the 60 or 72 cell panels can be replace with other makes if needed.Comment
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I think if the expansion is imminent within a year or two at the most, then oversizing may make sense if your POCO allows oversizing. If much longer, it make not make too much sense because the parts may become cheaper in a few years. But then again, we also don't know if the 30% tax credit incentive will be renewed after 2016 or not, which is only 2 years away now. So that also needs to be taken into consideration.
Regarding oversizing now to save on repeat cost of permits and fees, Naptown has shared with us some good info about the cost, and it looks like the structural study and drawing cost is the lion share of it ($1200-$1500) out of $1700 total. But I really wonder if a structural study is required in all cases or not. I really doubt that one was done for my installation because I didn't see any evidence of it, while I see all evidence of all other kinds of paperwork. Maybe there's some easy criteria that determines whether a structural study is required or not, and in most cases, it's not for a normal home roof top.Comment
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The Power Temp Coef (Pmpp) - 0.30% is pretty low compare with other makes @ 0.4% to 0.45%. SunPower has super 25 years warranty and others only 10 years.
Since SunPower offering 25 years, so you will get your panels covered since no way you can match SunPower panels with other makes if panels were bad. On the other hand, most of the 60 or 72 cell panels can be replace with other makes if needed.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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