I asked the company I went with why they didn't have a lot of reviews. They said that up until recently, they have been doing installs for other companies and have done over 1000. Also they don't seem to solicit reviews. My guess is that the companies with lots of reviews are asking their happy customers to write them.
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I live in Western Massachusetts, and am buying a Solar Panel System installed on my roof . My electric usage was 5960 kwh last year.
Here are my 6 best options:
1)7.560 kw System, annual production first year 6074 kwh, 24 LG315 Black solar panels, Enphase Microinverters, $3.96/watt.
2) 6.840 kw System, annual production first year 6500 kwh, 24 Suniva Opt 285 Black solar panels, Enphase Microinverters, $4.20/watt
3) 6.270 kw System, annual production first year 7838 kwh, 22 LG285 Black solar panels, Solar Edge inverter, $4.00/watt
4) 6.030 kw System, annual production first year 7588 kwh, 18 Sunpower 335 Black solar panels,with built in microinverters, $4.86/watt
5) 6.270 kw System, annual production first year 7076 kwh, 22 SolarWorld 285 Black solar panels, SolarEdge Inverter SE-5000, $3.40watt, BUT E Mount Air Brackets (railless) mounted on plywood .
6) 7.1550 kw System, annual production first year 6550 kwh, 27 Q Cell 265 Poly Blk panels.,Enphase M215-60-2LL-522, $4.20/watt.
Any thoughts or ideas about these choices?
Thank you
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I live in Western Massachusetts, and am buying a Solar Panel System installed on my roof . My electric usage was 5960 kwh last year.
Here are my 6 best options:
1)7.560 kw System, annual production first year 6074 kwh, 24 LG315 Black solar panels, Enphase Microinverters, $3.96/watt.
2) 6.840 kw System, annual production first year 6500 kwh, 24 Suniva Opt 285 Black solar panels, Enphase Microinverters, $4.20/watt
3) 6.270 kw System, annual production first year 7838 kwh, 22 LG285 Black solar panels, Solar Edge inverter, $4.00/watt
4) 6.030 kw System, annual production first year 7588 kwh, 18 Sunpower 335 Black solar panels,with built in microinverters, $4.86/watt
5) 6.270 kw System, annual production first year 7076 kwh, 22 SolarWorld 285 Black solar panels, SolarEdge Inverter SE-5000, $3.40watt, BUT E Mount Air Brackets (railless) mounted on plywood .
6) 7.1550 kw System, annual production first year 6550 kwh, 27 Q Cell 265 Poly Blk panels.,Enphase M215-60-2LL-522, $4.20/watt.
Any thoughts or ideas about these choices?
Thank you
1. Good. Ask if they are the S280 or M250 inverters. If they say M250, then call Enphase and ask them which is better for those panels.
2. No.
3. No.
4. No.
5. Ask them to requote with normal mounts then compare to #1.
6. No.
Last edited by rsilvers; 06-01-2016, 09:13 PM.Comment
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Thank you for your input. So that I can put your comments in better context for myself, do you work in the solar industry? What is your expertise?
RE:#2,#3,#4, & #6. Does "No" mean no good, or no comment? -
#1 is using Enphase S280 Micro Inverters.
Question:How is it that some systems have a higher annual production first year kWh number than System size kw number, while others are the opposite? Which is better, to have a higher annual production first year kWh number than System size kw number, or opposite?
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I am just someone who got seven quotes for my own system and had to learn a lot.
But my comments should be self-evident. Isn't it obvious that one would want better equipment for less money per watt?
For example, why consider #2 when the panels are less efficient, a lower-end brand, and more costly?Comment
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You should ignore the annual production estimates. They are just estimates and are mostly not comparable between quotes at all - though they could be if one company puts your panels in an inferior location. But that is a separate issue and not important at the quoting stage. Once you go with someone, you can make sure they make smart choices on panel locations.
A 300 watt panel in one brand will the same production as a 300 watt panel in another brand, because they are tested under what is called STC (standard test conditions). Now that is not exactly true as there will be some variation, but for the purposes of what you need to know to make a decision, you can consider them the same.Comment
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The one area I neglected during my entire bidding process was the racking system. My installer used Roof tech railless mounts. Based on rsilvers response, this is not a good thing. Yet everything I find when researching racking leads me to believe that there is nothing wrong with this type of mounting system. And it may become even more popular to help speed up installs, reduce costs, etc... There are drawbacks, of course, but there are also drawback with a full rail system. I am seeing stuff on "shared rail" systems which look to be different from the traditional rail system...so I am obviously confused a bit.
Whatever the case, I have what I have. I had my roof re-shingled before the install and my town's building inspector was overly anal about every bit of the install. After 6 months I have had nothing but zero electric bills and no headaches from leaky roofs or any other issue. Of course, our winter was very mild compared to last year so we didn;t have 7 feet of snow sitting on the panels like I would have the prior year. But I would think the lighter railless system would help here....Comment
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RE:Solar Panels. Reading the fine print of solar panel warranties, they do not cover rust or discoloration, or labor years 12-20, among other things.So nobody knows what these panels will look like fifteen to twenty years down the road? I am weighing better output by putting solar panels on front of my house (+400 kWh/yr.) , but back roof would be better for possible snow slides and hiding potentially weathered panels in future years. Plus I would need one or two more panels to equal the output gained if panels on front of house. Anyone have thoughts on this? Thank you.
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Thank you for the info? How about discoloration worries or such with either LG 315 or Suniva opt-280 panels? Would you put solar panels on the front of your house?Comment
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Also, does anyone have any issues with nests or wasp/bee hives under panels? I don't have any trees that touch my roof but I know bees/wasps like to hide under things. I used to have wasps behind the shudders next to my windows.Comment
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There is black racking and flash feet, I specifically didn't get it as the roof is very light silver grey ( energy star) shingles so the aluminum blends in.
You have to be pretty close to see the hardware, from the road to is hard to see. I left the rail ends a bit long, to give option to add more latter, easier to attach more rail.
I have not had any problems with anything under the modules. Some companies have a bottom shield , but we don't use them as it traps junk under the modules.OutBack FP1 w/ CS6P-250P http://bit.ly/1Sg5VNHComment
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I am comparing two systems from two different companies. Both front of house, roof mounted systems, on a ranch style house in Western Massachusetts.
Part of the system will be over the front door of my house. All Black panels will be used on both proposed systems.
1) 6.16 kw System, annual production first year 6699 kwh, 22 Suniva Opt 280 Black solar panels, Enphase M250 Microinverters, unirac Solar Mount, $3.59/watt from a national company,
RGS Energy. Online reviews state mediocre customer service with RGS, and I worry about racking sticking out on edges of panels, and worry about Suniva panels looking like crap in years 12-20. If I went with them I would buy an extended warranty to cover years 10-20 for roof leaks, wiring, labor and shipping on parts that fail,etc.
2) 6.030 kw System, annual production first year 6715 kwh, 18 Sunpower 335 Black solar panels,with built in microinverters & ac converters, Invisimount racking system, the best 25 year soup to nuts warranty and production in the industry, fewer number and best looking panels, $4.50/watt, from either Rayah Solar of Newton,MA., or PV Squared of Greenfield,MA.. If I went with them I would buy an extended warranty to cover years 10-20 for roof leaks, wiring,,etc.Neither company has very many reviews of any kind on Solarreviews.
Can anyone help me make an informed decision? I'm inclined to go with the better panels, but don't know which company to go with.
Thank you.
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I met with Rayah when I was getting quotes. They are a good company and came closest to matching what I paid for my system. They were still about 40 cents higher than what I paid but they were under $4 per watt using LG panels. Did Rayah give you a quote on non sunpower panels? If company one says you can fit 22 panels on your roof, I would guess you can get higher efficiency LG panels on there as well.
And forgive me if it was already stated but have you ruled out optimizers over microinverters? All the advice I got last year was to avoid Enphase like the plague. And yes, that advice was on this forum. Whatever issues people were referring to are probably fixed but not positive. And I was also cautioned about Sunpower's proprietary tech which "could" be an issue later on down the road if you need stuff fixed/replaced. I don't think that is a big deal but it was a consideration that was brought to my attention.
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There is black racking and flash feet, I specifically didn't get it as the roof is very light silver grey ( energy star) shingles so the aluminum blends in.
You have to be pretty close to see the hardware, from the road to is hard to see. I left the rail ends a bit long, to give option to add more latter, easier to attach more rail.
I have not had any problems with anything under the modules. Some companies have a bottom shield , but we don't use them as it traps junk under the modules.Last edited by NYHeel; 06-06-2016, 10:57 AM.Comment
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