I'd be concerned about spending 15k on a setup - only to have something far superior released in 4 years time at a fraction of the cost.
The thing is, in theory you wouldn't need a lot of batteries; just run straight from it
Interesting thread you've started MoXJO.
I've toyed with the idea, but still think the recovery of costs is years away, unless your a moderate to heavy user of light powered appliances...
Which bring us to the next point, energy in vs energy out.
If your house is converted to new fluroesent bulbs or led emitting lighting, running pc's, notebooks, radios, etc you'll find solar very efficient.
but running heavier appliances like tubetv's, plasmas, fridges, washers, microwave, hair dryers etc may be to heavy a drain on reserves.. unless your investing heaps of $$$ in panels and batteries.
The panels are still expensive, esp if your go for quality BP ones, deep cell batteries, etc, but sure in couple more years they will fall or be subsidised..
Also an viable alternative is small scale wind gererators, as the are more cost effecient and can compliment or subsitute the solar technology.
SevenFX
morning tekmann,
do you(or anyone else) have some links for more info about solar/wind generators? Currently looking for a house and would most definitely interested in doing something like that if it was worth doing.
These day a reasonable setup for most houses would cost under 10k and you would start saving/recovering money straight away.
There not much technology one can buy anymore that won't be superseeded in 4 years, which IMO is a long time in the technology sector.
Also I think a decent supply of batteries would be essential to capture erergy while the Sun Shines.
SevenFX
I haven't checked the current price but generally in the range $30 - $40 per REC with constant variation (just like the stock market).Anyone know how much you recieve a year off REC's? might be a nice addition to the power produced.
I haven't checked the current price but generally in the range $30 - $40 per REC with constant variation (just like the stock market).
The 10K system wouldn't come close to covering the energy needs of the average family,...
As I said before,..... Converting the family car to LPG Autogas will bring them 100 times more in savings than converting to solar,...
Yes LPG is a great option with gov rebate., by comparison, but one step further and no taxes (min) when you convert to CNG straight from your house.. (but off topic here)
SevenFX
Simply keeping the grid intact, even with zero power use, is about half the cost of supplying electricity. That cost won't go away even if everyone goes solar.
At present, electricity utilities have an incentive to discourage solar since fixed costs are recovered through consumption charges. Hence the general discouragement of anything other than using lots of electricity. That could be changed but I know for a fact that other utilities watched very closely what happened when a different charging system that removed the incentive to sell more power was tried in Tasmania. Suffice to say I very much doubt we'll see that idea come back for quite a while however much sense it might make.
This link below has a lots of Information on choices under left hand menu titled "Energy Use"
But the $ figures reflect having it all done by someone else, as opposed to you self installing and saving heaps.
http://www.greenhouse.gov.au/yourhome/technical/fs48.htm
EDIT: More
http://www.renewablestore.com.au/
But wait there more..:
SevenFX
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