springhill
Make the drill work for YOU
- Joined
- 20 June 2007
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Have you, or would you consider getting them installed?
Hi all,
I have built a new house and am looking to get solar panels installed on the roof. Have done some research on companies and their products, but would be interested in others experiences and opinions.
Have you, or would you consider getting them installed?
Have you used a company, and would recommend them, or vice versa?
How many kW should your system produce for it to be viable?
Most companies panels are made in China, but some have a 25 year manufacturers warranty, so the product seems to be of a reliable quality.
The government subsidies are due to reduce as of July 1st, so now may be a good time to make steps in this direction.
Any input would be appreciated.
Hi all,
I have built a new house and am looking to get solar panels installed on the roof. Have done some research on companies and their products, but would be interested in others experiences and opinions.
Have you, or would you consider getting them installed?
Have you used a company, and would recommend them, or vice versa?
How many kW should your system produce for it to be viable?
Most companies panels are made in China, but some have a 25 year manufacturers warranty, so the product seems to be of a reliable quality.
The government subsidies are due to reduce as of July 1st, so now may be a good time to make steps in this direction.
Any input would be appreciated.
Hi
If your hotwater system is electric, and installed by the standards, then it will have a cold water mixer to prevent children being burnt at various parts of the house.
If this is so, ensure your water is only being heated slightly over the final temperature.
Otherwise you are using excess energy heating up the water that is being cooled again.
Our neighbours have solarhotwater and a 5 panel grid connect and their bill is about $50
less than our. Our yearly bill $1200. but have gas hotplate.
There is a local who has just installed a large system on a house . I will get particulars.
Cheers
Dude! That's epic!Hi !
Were in Queensland, we have somewhere in the vicinity of 160 PV solar panels, covering an area that is 30m x 12m.
- This produces 30kw of electricity, which is realistically as much as you can do (30kw is 3-phase power) and if you produce more then 30kw you get a commercial feed in rate.
-Cost was roughly 150,000
-Annual returns are in the vicinity of 25,000 - 30,000 the variation is dependent upon wheather. Yes, we are getting 20% returns, guaranteed at that rate, by both the government and our contracted energy company, and of course the manufacturers warranty, 20% .. every year ... for 25 years. Which is better then a managed fund
-Our rate of of input to the grid is contracted for a long period of time.
Have just paid a deposit on a 4.14kw system from Central Solar Systems on the Gold Coast - cost to us $16700 after rebates etc.
http://www.nationalsolarpower.com.au/solar-power.It is also important to note that if you have a solar PV system installed, your electricity rates will change from an off‐peak tariff to a time‐of‐use (TOU) tariff. This will particularly affect your dedicated off‐peak loads, such as hot water, space heating and air‐conditioning. You should check with your electricity retailer whether the benefits of the time‐of‐use (TOU) tariff outweigh the benefits of staying on your off‐peak tariff. This needs to be considered before your install your solar P V panels
Apparently the after-rebate price of the system increases way out of proportion to its power increase.e.g.;
Your 4.14kW system costs $16,700,
My 1.5kW system was $2,990. There are plenty of cheaper ones around for under $2,000.
This is a 558% increase in cost for a 276% increase in power rating.
This is due to the amount of rebate not increasing in line with the size of the system. My understanding is there is a multiplier applied to the RECs for the first 1.5kw, but not thereafter. Our research led us to believe that there would be less benefit to us in installing a 1.5kw system as on a net tariff system there would be very little, if any, excess production to receive the feed-in tariff. Our savings would basically be whatever the system produced in kw x .21c (our current usage cost), whereas if we install a larger system and manage to generate excess kw, we will receive .50 (from Origin) per kw for the power fed back to the grid. As our power use is much less during the daylight hours (except weekends and school hols when teenagers rule) we should produce enough excess at .50c to heavily subsidise our power usage at .21c for the remainder of the day. At least - that's the plan.
While we're on the subject, I came across this article;
http://www.nationalsolarpower.com.au/solar-power.PHP:It is also important to note that if you have a solar PV system installed, your electricity rates will change from an off‐peak tariff to a time‐of‐use (TOU) tariff. This will particularly affect your dedicated off‐peak loads, such as hot water, space heating and air‐conditioning. You should check with your electricity retailer whether the benefits of the time‐of‐use (TOU) tariff outweigh the benefits of staying on your off‐peak tariff. This needs to be considered before your install your solar P V panels
Is this correct?
Is this correct?
The difference is in efficiency;I'm looking at getting a 1.5kw setup for my new house. Origin can do this for 3k, however there is the option of using Sharp panels for an extra $800.
Both come with a 25 year warranty, and Sharp's panels are now also made in China, so i'm wondering if anyone can figure any reason for upgrading?
Be warned - there's an awful lot of dud heat pumps and dud installers out there.Most of the solar companies I've spoken to recommend switching solar hot water systems to tariff 33 in Qld (avail 18hrs per day at 8.712c/kw instead of 21.351domestic rate), but a heat pump system can apparently work quite well on tariff 31 boosting alone unless hot water requirements are very high.
The sun will be further north during most of the year. If the evap cooler is directly west of the panels and only casting a shadow late in the day during Summer then it won't really be an issue. But if it's north of the panels then that's certainly a big problem.Thanks for the info Pixel - I'm comparing the answers given here to those of the consultants.
Something I noticed last night coming home from work: At around 7pm my evap aircon delivers a shadow across a part of the area which would have the panels installed.
If this is the case, is solar panels a no go for that short period of time out of the day where there is full light? I also don't have much knowledge of astronomy and the like, but does the angle at which the sun rises and set change?
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