So, I am on a journey for anyone interested in joining me...
I am an engineer (aerospace) who is sometimes too analytical for my own good.
I have a fairly new 6kw system that has been operating since Nov 2014 and am already wondering if I should be on TOU.
I have been trying to comprehend SCEs various rate structures and I am convinced that they must be purposely complex to keep people from understanding how they work. Much like the tax codes or legal-speak.
Here is the link to sce rate schedules:
To view the TOU rates, scroll down and expand the "+View pricing for these TOU rates" section...
I have several questions, but I will start with the basics
1. I am finding (so far) that the TOU-D-A plan is best for me. This plan shows 1 "on-peak" rate and 2 "off peak" rates (super, regular) . The on peak claims it is "On-Peak: 2 p.m – 8 p.m. (non-holiday weekdays only)" . So, my question is during weekends what is the rate? There are 2 off peak rates. I obviously could assume the super off peak rate, but my experience tells me assuming might cost me money!
2. For the TOU-D-T plan, I would assume that if I find myself in tier 2 (past 130% baseline) that the higher price of electricity is only for consumption not for generation? Or, said another way, they never pay me at anything but tier 1 rates, but can charge me for tier 2 if applicable?
I have tried to model all 3 plans in Excel and have a pretty cool spreadsheet going (it's a little complicated too) and would like to invite anyone interested in checking it in some way as a second set of eyes (more validation of answers seem right, less checking formulas) . I have used my actual hourly gen/consumption data for the last 3 months. I don't think the spreadsheet is perfect yet, I am still making tweaks...but it's getting there.
I am an engineer (aerospace) who is sometimes too analytical for my own good.
I have a fairly new 6kw system that has been operating since Nov 2014 and am already wondering if I should be on TOU.
I have been trying to comprehend SCEs various rate structures and I am convinced that they must be purposely complex to keep people from understanding how they work. Much like the tax codes or legal-speak.
Here is the link to sce rate schedules:
To view the TOU rates, scroll down and expand the "+View pricing for these TOU rates" section...
I have several questions, but I will start with the basics
1. I am finding (so far) that the TOU-D-A plan is best for me. This plan shows 1 "on-peak" rate and 2 "off peak" rates (super, regular) . The on peak claims it is "On-Peak: 2 p.m – 8 p.m. (non-holiday weekdays only)" . So, my question is during weekends what is the rate? There are 2 off peak rates. I obviously could assume the super off peak rate, but my experience tells me assuming might cost me money!
2. For the TOU-D-T plan, I would assume that if I find myself in tier 2 (past 130% baseline) that the higher price of electricity is only for consumption not for generation? Or, said another way, they never pay me at anything but tier 1 rates, but can charge me for tier 2 if applicable?
I have tried to model all 3 plans in Excel and have a pretty cool spreadsheet going (it's a little complicated too) and would like to invite anyone interested in checking it in some way as a second set of eyes (more validation of answers seem right, less checking formulas) . I have used my actual hourly gen/consumption data for the last 3 months. I don't think the spreadsheet is perfect yet, I am still making tweaks...but it's getting there.
Comment