Let me clarify
Let me clarify a couple of things from my previous comment. "The pricing on SP looks pretty good for the new lease unfortunately this is the new reality." This doesn't mean I would spend my money on this lease. It means more that SP has priced themselves out of the lease market until SC increases their lease price or SP lowers theirs. When I say it looks pretty good that was wholly intended to mean that considering what SunPower charges for their panels the price in the lease is fair considering the changes to the pricing structure they made recently. I'm not suggesting you go with that lease. I think you will be better off in you can finance it and if you can utilize the federal tax credit by purchasing non-SP panels and foregoing the lease entirely. The PPD lease ship seems to have sailed for the foreseeable future IMO it's back to people owning their PV systems. In looking back over these posts Rock, the SC lease seems to increase in price as it gets larger about 40 cents more per watt on the larger system (10.08). This makes me think that they have a bit of room to lower the price of the larger system, snuck a main panel upgrade in there or something. Do you know what your annual kWhrs are? It looks like they are about 14400 kWhr a year to me. This should pretty much be where everyone going solar should start and don't rely on the salesman to calculate this number. This is where the number fudging can begin. SC Edison has this information online or you can call in to get it. I imagine PG&E does the same. The larger SC system to be capable of covering your entire bill approaching the 15,000 kWhr production range annually. The smaller SC system I have at a little over 9,000 kWhr annually takes your bill with the E8 rate down to about $45 a month (I used the CSI calc). If your annual consumption is about 14400 a year you would need 36-39 240w panels with the switch to E8 you ought to get that thing down to zero for a few years. Find a company that guarantees production before you purchase.
Let me clarify a couple of things from my previous comment. "The pricing on SP looks pretty good for the new lease unfortunately this is the new reality." This doesn't mean I would spend my money on this lease. It means more that SP has priced themselves out of the lease market until SC increases their lease price or SP lowers theirs. When I say it looks pretty good that was wholly intended to mean that considering what SunPower charges for their panels the price in the lease is fair considering the changes to the pricing structure they made recently. I'm not suggesting you go with that lease. I think you will be better off in you can finance it and if you can utilize the federal tax credit by purchasing non-SP panels and foregoing the lease entirely. The PPD lease ship seems to have sailed for the foreseeable future IMO it's back to people owning their PV systems. In looking back over these posts Rock, the SC lease seems to increase in price as it gets larger about 40 cents more per watt on the larger system (10.08). This makes me think that they have a bit of room to lower the price of the larger system, snuck a main panel upgrade in there or something. Do you know what your annual kWhrs are? It looks like they are about 14400 kWhr a year to me. This should pretty much be where everyone going solar should start and don't rely on the salesman to calculate this number. This is where the number fudging can begin. SC Edison has this information online or you can call in to get it. I imagine PG&E does the same. The larger SC system to be capable of covering your entire bill approaching the 15,000 kWhr production range annually. The smaller SC system I have at a little over 9,000 kWhr annually takes your bill with the E8 rate down to about $45 a month (I used the CSI calc). If your annual consumption is about 14400 a year you would need 36-39 240w panels with the switch to E8 you ought to get that thing down to zero for a few years. Find a company that guarantees production before you purchase.
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