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Solar Panels 1 Year Later - What I WISH I Knew

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  • čas přidán 17. 08. 2024
  • Solar: Check out Hoymiles for WORLD CLASS Inverters! geni.us/Inverters
    After a BRUTAL first year of horribly high energy bills, I'm happy to report that I now have solar. But this process has taught me a LOT, and there's so much I wish I had known last year before getting started.
    I needed a new roof, I needed to replace wood, and so this was a worst-case scenario. So join me as I get into the numbers for my first year of solar panels, and learn from my mistakes so you can be better informed! This is everything I learned from having solar for 1 year!
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Komentáře • 704

  • @TwoBitDaVinci
    @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 8 měsíci +14

    Check out Hoymiles for WORLD CLASS Solar Inverters! geni.us/Inverters

    • @mb-3faze
      @mb-3faze Před 8 měsíci

      When car manufacturers fully implement Vehicle-to-Grid functionality then home batteries will make a whole lot more sense.

    • @claycruckosha
      @claycruckosha Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks for the Hoymiles recommendation! Would be cool to see you do a video about gamifying the monopolies' new "demand" plans with solar, rather than the export/NEM 3.0. SDGE, PG&E, SRP, APS, and more either have such plans already, or are soon rolling out, and will make the grid much smarter, eliminating waste. Brayden demand managements and/or batteries paired with solar make the perfect trifecta with these demand plans for max ROI.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Před 8 měsíci +1

      Another benefit of solar (when you live on the west coast) is earthquake resiliency.
      Thank you for sharing your experience

    • @pawekaczmarczyk2186
      @pawekaczmarczyk2186 Před 8 měsíci

      @@b_uppy Only when you have an off-grid installation with enough energy storage, which is rare i think.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@pawekaczmarczyk2186
      Actually some solar systems can be on grid and still supply for the homeowner because they can isolate tk the house alone when necessary to avoid feeding power at an inopportune time. This is to protect linemen working on power lines from the possibility of electricity feeding in after the main line power is turned off...

  • @KPHVAC
    @KPHVAC Před 8 měsíci +55

    When you upgrade your HVAC system get every duct airflow tested! I see so many homes that are loosing close to 50% of the airflow to the crawlspace or attic. Getting the ductwork fixed or sealed is often the largest efficiency upgrade.

    • @SubvertTheState
      @SubvertTheState Před 8 měsíci +1

      Good tip

    • @truthsRsung
      @truthsRsung Před 8 měsíci +1

      Why bother creating the static pressure to push air through Ducts?
      Why heat and cool the whole house as one unit?
      You speak of efficiency, but ignore it all together.

    • @KPHVAC
      @KPHVAC Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@truthsRsung He has a ducted gas furnace and AC. My point for everyone with a ducted system is to not ignore their ductwork! The vast majority of homeowners I work with only think about replacing the furnace or adding an AC or Heat Pump. The ductwork is just as important.

    • @truthsRsung
      @truthsRsung Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@KPHVAC ...They are parts of the house that go unseen and are, at best, difficult to Clean, but ALWAYS require energy to move air inside them.
      Tell people not to ignore their mini-split, and they, themselves, can actually do the maintenance.

    • @sophiegrisom
      @sophiegrisom Před 7 měsíci +2

      One of the first things I did after move-in 2001, was to seal the ducts and wrap with more insulation, plus added R-30 attic insulation, plus replaced all 1-pane aluminum windows to double-pane vinyl. Near enough SF Bay to get a cool breeze at night, so use a whole-house fan to chill the house all night, seal-up at 68 F in morning and stays below 80 F all day even when >100 F. Repeat at night. Only run AC 2 weeks per year. Max e-bill is $150/mo, while neighbors fuss about $600. Will add solar panels for pool-pump and as a gazebo and carport cover.

  • @DSC800
    @DSC800 Před 8 měsíci +22

    Never heard of "Hoymiles" before and not a lot of info about the company, other than they are Chinese and went public a couple years ago. Appreciate you named this company as a sponsor. Looking it up it's not a cheaper product than Enphase though. That 4 into 1 unit seems like a great idea but it's almost $500! One new IQ7 is $85 and a long proven product/company. I'm not pushing Enphase but they'd be my choice today. I actually have a 9 year old Solaredge system which had the inverter replaced this year under warranty and one optimizer replaced a few years ago, also under warranty.

    • @fintrollpgr
      @fintrollpgr Před 7 měsíci +3

      A big important difference why I went Hoymiles is that Enphase microinverters are horribly undersized for modern panels. With Hoymiles you can get the full performance out of a 400Wp+ panel, Enphase just can't.... Not even with the newer IQ8's. Added benefit with OpenDTU, a fully open source monitoring system, I have full local control over my Hoymiles install for little money (30$)

  • @mendohomepower7492
    @mendohomepower7492 Před 8 měsíci +32

    Since you are not on Nem 3 watch out for the utility company upgrading you to Nem 3 when you upgrade by over 10%. That's the rule here with PGE. You may want to use the new array for charging and daytime use only and not grid tie it.

    • @davelindgren5245
      @davelindgren5245 Před 7 měsíci +8

      110% agree. I am 110% positive that the California utilities will do anything to move people from NEM 2 to NEM 3. I'm not sure who finally got bribed but what they have done is a crime.

    • @LastWish90
      @LastWish90 Před 7 měsíci

      @@davelindgren5245 Not to support the utility companies or anything but it kinda makes sense, here in Germany or in the EU grind market some times of the day the price per MWh can go negative, meaning if you want to "sell" electricity as a utility it costs you money to do so, so you just opt not to do so if you can like for example turn off your wind turbines.
      Now idk how the market is in the US or California, herein Germany you can look at the current market price and how much percent of the energy produced and used is from renewable and non-renewable sources.
      So of course they gonna charge you for the electricity you export and try to get you from NEM 2 to NEM 3 to save that money it costs to compensate your electricity when it's expensive for them to do so.
      But here we also use way less electricity because most households don't have AC here.
      without my car we use about 2000kWh/year for 2 persons, our landlord living upstairs uses about 750kWh/year so nothing compared to the US.
      Then most utilities still charge fixed prices per kWh, time of use tariff are only recently becoming available, but we pay 0,23€/kWh which is pretty cheap around here so we don't feel the need to switch.

    • @rudycastillo4150
      @rudycastillo4150 Před 6 měsíci

      Definitely

  • @philipmiller2618
    @philipmiller2618 Před 8 měsíci +30

    What amazes me is how fast the panels themselves are improving. Once battery technology becomes better and better, the whole system could take off. It'll be interesting to see where solar goes.

    • @b3owu1f
      @b3owu1f Před 8 měsíci +2

      Battery is well ahead of solar at this point. LFP batteries are cheap (relatively speaking) with 15+ year life spans and definitely improving with the 100 year sodium batteries starting to hit the market (slowly). Solar panels at 20% or so efficiency is ok.. but we really need like 60%+ some day some how and smaller panels so we can avoid large installations. That and new wind turbine roof top solutions combined to produce enough energy to run the house and keep the batteries charged.

    • @sophiegrisom
      @sophiegrisom Před 7 měsíci

      In researching, appears that LFP batteries have dropped in price about half in just 2 years. But, research quality, such as youtube teardowns by Will Prowse. Best is a battery with communication to a charger (ex. AllInOne inverter), which are pricier and often rack-mount. Most RV owners are switching to LFP batteries, which are half the weight of lead-acid and actually cheaper when considering real-world specs and lifetime.

    • @NeblogaiLT
      @NeblogaiLT Před 7 měsíci

      @@b3owu1f IMO, it is clearly the other way around. Solar panels are reliable enough to last decades. They are powerful enough for high energy production per area. And tey are also cheap, so easily pay for themselves. But batteries are not: best LFP is rated for ~5000 cycles, which is ~13.5 years of daily discharge. And in real life, some of the cells in them are likely to fail earlier, like it happens in older EVs. Plus the cost: they do not always even pay for themselves through their lifetime. For example, a cheap 5kWh battery costs about €2000+. If you are lucky, it will do 5000 cycles x5 kWh=25MWh (=~22MWh after battery capacity loss). So the cost of storage, including energy losses, is 22MWh/€2000= ~10 cents per kWh. That is significant, so batteries need to get cheaper.
      Regarding the Sodium Ion: they need time, further ramp up of production, and tests. Current ones do not have high recharge cycle number. Those are hard to know at this point, but I have not seen products rated for more than 2000 cycles. There is expectation of it going to 3-5k cycles in a few years, and then to 8-10 by the end of the decade- but we still need to to see it.

    • @JohnR31415
      @JohnR31415 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@b3owu1fdon’t need 60%… there are limits to efficiency, but there is a *huge* amount of available energy beaming down.

    • @vorpalinferno9711
      @vorpalinferno9711 Před 6 měsíci

      Perovskite.

  • @BBCMONTE34
    @BBCMONTE34 Před 8 měsíci +52

    If you’re looking to swap your central air I’d suggest Mitsubishi ducted inverter heat pumps. The inverter compressor soft start is much easier on those batteries along with the highest quality and reliability.

    • @lucashinch
      @lucashinch Před 8 měsíci +2

      I agree 100% ,"Mitsubishi inverter mini splits" are great !
      Easy install and maintenance, easy to incorporate within the homes existing architecture.

    • @johnrogers1423
      @johnrogers1423 Před 8 měsíci +1

      A multi split system might be worth investigating. One outside unit with up to five inside units on a single phase supply.

    • @BBCMONTE34
      @BBCMONTE34 Před 8 měsíci

      You can do it that way but many times the cost compared to their ducted units is pretty substantial. At least up to 3.5 tons.

    • @johnrogers1423
      @johnrogers1423 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I found that a five head multi split was thousands of dollars cheaper than a whole house ducted unit and that was with three expensive Daikin Nexura heads in my multi split system. The multi split is far more flexible and cheaper to run as it is possible to only heat/cool one or two rooms or all five as opposed to having to heat/cool the whole house.

    • @peterryan7340
      @peterryan7340 Před 8 měsíci

      Mitsubishi Electric, not Mitsubishi Heavy Industries

  • @davidanderson6027
    @davidanderson6027 Před 8 měsíci +22

    I love your channel. As far as a 25 year warranty or a lifetime warranty goes ,if the company is no longer around/out or business…no warranty.

    • @gerald4027
      @gerald4027 Před 8 měsíci

      Yes everything is going to be made in China, including babies.

    • @bigdougscommentary5719
      @bigdougscommentary5719 Před 7 měsíci +3

      That’s the same for ANYTHING you buy.

    • @rocks2rocks06
      @rocks2rocks06 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Even if the company is around they wont fulfill the warranty look up ION Solar. Enphase ghosted me after I sent them pictures showing it was the 10th micro inverter that failed in 3 years, my feelings is they prevented the system from reporting thinking I would not be able to tell how munch power it was actually producing.

    • @crcurran
      @crcurran Před 6 měsíci

      @@rocks2rocks06Ouch. I'm leaning string inverter since upgrading every 10 to 15 years would have the benefit of progress and the likelihood the company will be in existence until I do upgrade of the product.
      25 years sounds good but a lot can happen in that time. 10 to 15 years I equate to the ability to course correct.

    • @robortkristensen3818
      @robortkristensen3818 Před 6 měsíci

      That loose connection could have caused a fire if it was part of a string inverter setup. High DC voltage will arc just like welding. Micro inverters are more work to install as you most likely need to extent the cables on the panels, but are much safer.

  • @DS-mz7dy
    @DS-mz7dy Před 8 měsíci +17

    I always find it curious when I tell people I have solar, their first question is "how much did it cost?" and second, "what's the payback period on that?" BUT if I were to add something like a new front door or new siding, nobody asks those questions. When I add a new door next year, I want someone to ask me "what's the payback period on that door?" I like to tell people that solar is THE ONLY thing you can add to your house that starts paying you back on day one! It goes in one ear and out the other.

    • @jamesbrunk9817
      @jamesbrunk9817 Před 8 měsíci +3

      It is because the investment is high and if it does not pay you back, why do it? The things you mention are maintenance items and most likely need to be done. Solar is optional.

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@jamesbrunk9817 - expensive siding (front door or window replacement) or included sealing / ventilation and insulation gets to be "optional too" - and there may be no real financial payback (triple glazing vs double glazing for example - price increase may not result in rational savings) - of course "feeling good" about one's choices is nice (if one has that mentality).

    • @b3owu1f
      @b3owu1f Před 8 měsíci +1

      Batteries will pay back as well. Also.. if you drink coffee a lot.. roasting your own beans saves you a ton of money and much better quality coffee and it's easy to do.

    • @DSC800
      @DSC800 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @DS-mz7dy : yeah, but getting solar has a fairly definable return. You are spending a fixed amount of dollars to eliminate a known monthly expense. They do try to pitch windows, insulation, hvac, etc as having a return or payback period too, but it is less definable.

    • @sheldonwilkinson9215
      @sheldonwilkinson9215 Před 6 měsíci

      The next time someone asked you that question, you should ask them. “What is the ROI on payments to the electricity companies?”

  • @frax1988
    @frax1988 Před 8 měsíci +16

    Man i'm from the Netherlands and we (a family of 5) use 3500kw a year. The energy usage you have is crazy for us! Love your videos, keep em coming!

    • @paul1979uk2000
      @paul1979uk2000 Před 8 měsíci +3

      We use on average around 5800kw per year in our house in the UK.
      The funny thing is, we went on an energy saving drive around 2 decades ago, basically, reducing our energy use as much as realistically possible, but without changing our lifestyle, we managed to cut our energy use in half and in fact, we actually use more tech gadgets around the house.
      There are other areas we can do to reduce our energy, but these are much bigger expenses and something we'll do when the time is right.
      Also, during the summer when Putin invaded Ukraine, we went on a massive insulation job to insulated the house for winter, to our surprise, it's remarkable how well it works, so much so that we rarely need heating at all and the house feels comfortable at -5C outside, which is a major improvement over what we had, the other benefit of this is that, even when you do put the heating on, you only need it on for around an hour and it's enough to keep the house warm for half the day.
      We did do a mistake when it comes to summer, it can get quite hot upstairs, whereas downstairs is fine, and we've kinda got used to it, but we are planning on looking into solutions to reduce the outside heat from getting in.
      All in all, I'm very happy with the results and even thought I know over the long run, our energy use will go up because of electric cars and heat pumps, we could reduce the energy bill a lot with solar.
      In any case, my advice to anyone, try and get your house so you rarely need to use heating or cooling to feel comfortable, that's probably going to save you a lot of money over the long run, but the cost to do so will depend on your house, in our case, it didn't cost too much but some house can cost a lot more to do that.

    • @b3owu1f
      @b3owu1f Před 8 měsíci

      I read that average homes of 3 to 4 use about 25kwh to 30kwh a day.. which would be about 10,000kwh a year. I think that's pretty low, but 3500kw a year seems like you run a lot of electrical items all the time?

    • @spankeyfish
      @spankeyfish Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@b3owu1f Houses in Europe are usually heated with gas and very few people have aircon at home. Heating and cooling are the 2 biggest power draws, cooking is the 3rd.

    • @zarkov2324
      @zarkov2324 Před 7 měsíci

      @@b3owu1f this guy is using 50kwh per day and he has a heap of gas appliances, heating, etc. I would say his house is horrendously inefficient.

    • @listerthat
      @listerthat Před 7 měsíci

      @spankeyfish wouldn't this imply that house design in the US is extremely poor. Well designed built homes in the US would require less AC. Its incredibly large the misuse of power that goes on.

  • @jes2731
    @jes2731 Před 8 měsíci +4

    A year later, and even with a string inverter, the newer panels are better with shading, without having 27 points of failure under every panel. ...and the string inverter isn't under a panel up on the roof. Oh, and like in southern Nevada with Nevada Energy, you are not allowed a solar system that creates more than you can use. It must be to a max of 95% and cannot send any excess back to the grid. ...and if there is a brown-out / black-out and line power to the residence is lost, the solar system must also go offline. Just another reason on top of so many others to move to the Philippines! !!!-Mabuhay-!!! Life is good again!

  • @wva5089
    @wva5089 Před 8 měsíci +11

    One con you didn't mention with microinverters is the Dc -> Ac ->Dc (battery) -> AC more ac/dc conversions and the losses there.
    String inverters don't have that.

    • @wva5089
      @wva5089 Před 8 měsíci

      and because of the extra conversons.. you pay for more inverters.. and the battery to ac one is a single point of failure.. better a single point of failure with a single spare then mulitple single points of failure

  • @junkerzn7312
    @junkerzn7312 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Quad-microinverters are usually a lose, not a win. They are not nearly as reliable as single-panel micro-inverters due to the heat dissipation problem. The bigger problem for you, however, is that custom cable. MC4 connectors are a major failure point for roof-top solar systems . Solar panel makers generally do a good job, but custom installer-crimped cables are usually really bad.
    When doing a custom MC4 cable, you always want to crimp AND solder. Yah yah, I know, MC4s are supposed to work just fine with only the crimp, but if you really want the cable to last you solder it too... and those crimp areas are really easy to solder.
    In anycase, the issue with installer-crimped cables is that when not done properly they can actually be a fire-hazard. You are lucky that wire pulled out completely. A partial pull-out could have resulted in a high-resistance connection and melting / burning / possibly even a fire. I would check under the panels with a thermal camera at all the installer-specific cabling connectors (during a sunny day) to make sure there aren't any hot spots.
    -Matt

  • @SWTrailsAndWheels
    @SWTrailsAndWheels Před 8 měsíci +15

    I've installed many of both types of inverters. In microinverter systems there always seem to be a handful that fail very early. SMA string inverters have been super robust and reliable in my experience.

    • @elmojito
      @elmojito Před 7 měsíci +2

      For my installation I went with Fronius string inverter and after 2 years expended the installation with a second Fronius. Like SMA they rae robust and reliable, and in Europe great support.

    • @thezfunk
      @thezfunk Před 7 měsíci +2

      As an electronic component that makes sense. If a component is going to fail it usually is pretty early. Stuff does wear out like caps and stuff but most of your electronic failure is going to be early. Unless you get a power surge or it gets hot or something.
      Just got a brand new oven and microwave and in two weeks the transformer for the microwave died.

  • @tomb5552
    @tomb5552 Před 8 měsíci +2

    To find which panel is not perform to its full potential, or not working at all. I would use a cardboard sheet cut to size of a panel. During peak light, cover one panel at a time and read your total output, the one that gives the least power drop is the problem one.

  • @darrellbrown8547
    @darrellbrown8547 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Nice video. I have the blessing of a free energy at night program in Texas. I have 36 panels with a tesla battery. I am loving them. Before installing the panels, my electric bill in the summer was $750/mo. Now I pay around $60/ month. The panels cost $400/mo.

  • @bloepje
    @bloepje Před 8 měsíci +12

    The turn off for your panels is quite troubling. Panels should work in those lighting conditions. But it also depends on the type of panels: some are better for indirect lighting. I live in the Netherlands, and we have enough clouds, and it still works.
    That's also the difference between microinverter and string: the minimal lighting conditions are better.

    • @jozefa1234
      @jozefa1234 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I have 9 pannels withe optimizers and they work great in the Netherlands with clouds and trees in the way blocking sunlight

  • @jonasgranlund4427
    @jonasgranlund4427 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Hi Ricky, great walk through, but regarding String Inverters vs microinverters, the SLA of the total system must be a lot lower with Microinverters even if their average survival year is longer. I would say that if you have a ground mount or roof mount without any shadows I would use string inverters and if I wanted to use different directions on panels and also if the panels had some shadow parts I would go with Microinverters. What I've heard the last 6 years during my interest for Solar is that the Microinverter is a lot more likely to break than the panel itself.

  • @panoramictravels
    @panoramictravels Před 7 měsíci +5

    Great video, as always! I'm surprised you didn't have batteries in your system from the initial installation. I live in Michigan and have sixteen 330W panels on my roof (direct southern exposure with no shade) and one Tesla PowerWall 2 battery in the basement. This system provides me with about 80% of our electrical needs. We're retired and only use about 22 kWh a day, including charging our Prius Prime plug-in hybrid.
    Here are a few of the benefits of the battery:
    1) can act as a whole house generator when the power goes out (as long as it's sunny the next day!);
    2) if it got charged during the day it will provide electricity after the sun goes down; and
    3) the Tesla app tracks an amazing amount of data that I can use to graph my production, usage and savings.
    Regarding point 2 - we were once off of the grid for 32 days!

    • @livingtree3547
      @livingtree3547 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Cost for your system? Total size?

    • @panoramictravels
      @panoramictravels Před 4 měsíci

      @@livingtree3547 About $28,000 US, but only $21,000 after a $7,000 federal credit. Sixteen 330W panels = 5.28 kW system. The Tesla PowerWall 2 battery has a 13.5 kW-hour capacity.

  • @HutchinsonJC
    @HutchinsonJC Před 8 měsíci +9

    I have to say that I just love the information provided by so much of this kind of equipment and the software or apps designed to run with it all.
    My Victron charge controller can be bluetoothed to a phone and you can see the day by day power production, you can see total kwh from the first day of using the equipment to the current date of using the equipment, you can see current usage, current power generation. It's just kinda fun to nerd out seeing all this data haha. It's also helpful beyond just nerding out too though because you can become significantly more aware of your power needs.

  • @davefilicicchia6341
    @davefilicicchia6341 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Wow, I thought paying ~20 cents per kwh here in Chicagoland was high, but I had no idea people were paying 42 cents per kwh! Solar really does make more sense at those rates. Thanks.

  • @energitrimmeren
    @energitrimmeren Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have a full solar roof facing SSE and NNW, where I’ve had up to 35% peak over-production with micro inverters connecting to 6 cells with same facing. After rewirering 4 SSE and 2 NNW, the peak has been reduced, and my production on sunny days has increased with 15-20%. Another benefit to micro inverters.
    As always a great informative vlog. T’as from 🇩🇰

  • @MrHandsomeRob1977
    @MrHandsomeRob1977 Před 8 měsíci +3

    adding a heat pump is a great way to ditch NG, especially as you are in San Diego a warm climate. We have a heat pump, that replaced a corn burning furnace, and a mini split with 2 head units for the upstairs. It is great, but it is a energy consumer for sure. Yes it is more efficient at moving heat than old resistive heaters, but it is still a lot to account for and see what your battery can handle for starts and continuous loads. Thankfully we still have 1:1 net metering in Illinois so my 21kW system doesn't need a battery and we also charge our Ioniq 5 every other day.

  • @bobholland9924
    @bobholland9924 Před 8 měsíci +3

    If all your loosing in the winter is a hour that's not bad. The sun rides so low in the southern sky that the last hour is very poor in energy production. That being said . You always over size your panel array . If you have the money. But panels are so cheap now . Compared to 2000 they were 5 bucks a watt back then.

  • @look2much2
    @look2much2 Před 8 měsíci +47

    shouldn't you disclose this was an ad?

    • @johnowens8992
      @johnowens8992 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Oh he never mentioned the sponsorship

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Před 7 měsíci +3

      But you figured it out, oh wise one! That's what matters.

    • @renebirabent635
      @renebirabent635 Před 7 měsíci +6

      15:23 he says they are a sponsor

    • @19derrick77
      @19derrick77 Před 6 měsíci +3

      Thanks! Fortunately I read this, otherwise I would’ve watched the video.

    • @Timeus
      @Timeus Před 6 měsíci

      Inverter savings to the wind or battery power

  • @roi354
    @roi354 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Your advice might be good for US but in Europe we have much smaller houses and they're usually on two levels so there's far less roof space for panels.
    The advice I give over here is fit as many panels as you have the space for in one go. If you need to budget then get a cheaper inverter that can be easily upgraded later on. Most of us can't simply walk around on our huge roofs because we have proper tiles, so maintenance and fitting more panels later is expensive vs doing it right the first time.

  • @elguapo432
    @elguapo432 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Hey Ricky, love the show! I doubt you’ll get the same monthly average production over the next 4 winter months so your payoff calculation may be a bit generous.
    I’m also in SD and just finished my first year of solar. I greatly benefited from adding 2 powerwalls by only consuming super off peak electricity for my 2 EVs and charging them from the grid, then selling 80-90% of all solar to the grid. I’d love to hear how your battery setup is going and if it’s offsetting your daily Peak energy usage.
    Btw, homeowners in CA on NEM2.0 should be aware that if they expand their solar setup, they will be forced to the less favorable NEM3.0.

  • @Keyframe007
    @Keyframe007 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Thank you for these vids Ricky. They were a huge help in preparing us for our solar system. Now that’s it’s up and running it’s so obvious we should have made this addition years ago. Enphase micro inverters with Canadian Solar panels.

  • @danieljones7560
    @danieljones7560 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Good video, as always, but I have to disagree with you on one point. String inverters are much more reliable than micro inverters. Especially in hot climates, the micro inverters get toasted. I've seen many failures of micro inverters, but I've never had a string inverter fail.
    Don't get me wrong, if shading is an issue, go Micro. But the idea string inverters are less reliable isn't true in my experience. I have two SMA in my garage and one is already about 13 years old.
    Also, if you go to install a battery system after the fact, strings will be easier.

  • @euge963
    @euge963 Před 8 měsíci +5

    We were lucky enough to be under warranty for our microinverters, we had about 5 go out roughly 9 years into our install

    • @behindthebuild8016
      @behindthebuild8016 Před 6 měsíci

      Did they replace them with the same model or a newer model and were they compatible with the others?

  • @ismailalvi
    @ismailalvi Před 8 měsíci +2

    For approx 40k USD in pakistan at the moment, you can get north of 100kW on-grid system

  • @feuby8480
    @feuby8480 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I just want to aknowledge your work here, since i started watching you. You got really more professionnal looking, more professionnal editing, and almost always listening to advices that we, viewer, can provide to you.
    I am really happy to see you grow. If you ever hear about some solar alternative for people far more north than you, please review it :).

  • @user-ts5bj5pi2l
    @user-ts5bj5pi2l Před 8 měsíci +2

    Hi Ricky, one way to economically make solar hot water using daytime solar is to run your existing electric HW cylinder via a step down transformer. We run at 240v in New Zealand so I use s step down transformer to power the HW cylinder at 120V. This results in the load dropping from 3KW to 0.75KW. The water heats more slowly but by using a timer switch to use daytime solar production I can easily keep up with my needs for hotwater. The low load means that even on cloudy days my modest 5KW PV system manages OK. I would assume that the same strategy could still work in the US.
    My system is also a little different in that I have a changeover switch to select either mains or completely off grid. By isolating the two systems I miss out on export tarrifs but avoid the regulations that apply to a grid connected system.
    Thanks for your great channel.

    • @906MediaProductions
      @906MediaProductions Před 8 měsíci

      It's also worth looking into a solar water panel, they're more efficient than going from PV>electric but at the cost of complexity.

  • @simon359
    @simon359 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I live in the Pacific Northwest and I don’t use any micro inverters, string inverters, and I get along fine! I figure any clouds that go over are going to move eventually, just like any plane or tree shadow.
    The only time it is a problem is in the winter when the sun is very low on the horizon.
    It’s easier just to get some more panels on the east side, as well as the west side, as my house is oriented towards the south.
    I figure it’s more cost-effective to orient my panels by raising some of them at an angle for the winter.
    Another way I try to save money, is to switch back to the grid at night in order to keep my batteries from being drained completely. That’s only during the winter months.
    Also, I’m off grid, but can still connect to the grid. I just didn’t want to go through the permits and the other BS to be grid tied. Although I have to switch back manually, I don’t care!🖖

  • @christophersiano969
    @christophersiano969 Před 7 měsíci

    I was a coach for a "solarize" campaign in my town. Roughly 50% of the households went micro-inverter and the other 50% went string inverter with power optimizers.
    That was back in 2014. All the components came with 25 year warranties.
    Since the installs, we've had 4 micro-inverter failures and ZERO string inverter failures.
    The inverter is a vert delicate device. The typical IGBT that does the switching to create the AC out of the DC is the most likely to fail. Do you want that component in an exposed area on the roof where it bakes in the summer and freezes in the winter? Moisture, humidity, etc. OR, do you want that sensitive component in a nice stable basement?
    Then, when it comes to failures, the weather doesn't matter in changing out a string inverter and the worker is standing in the basement. Micro-inverters are under your panel. You might need to take off multiple panels to get at the one that failed. You are not changing it out in the rain, snow, wind, heat, etc.
    The other thing that power optimizers do is balance the voltage. By keeping the input voltage constant to the string inverter, it is MUCH more efficient. Mine is rated at better than 98% efficiency.
    Lastly, if you have a battery backup, you want to keep the power as DC to the battery. With micro-inverters, you go from DC (the panel) to AC (the micro-inverter) to DC (the battery charger) and then back to AC again (use from the battery) With a string inverter, you can send DC to both the battery charger and the inverter to do whatever is needed. And you only convert the DC to AC when it is needed. It is these conversions that have the most losses. DC to DC conversions (ie, voltage changes) are far more efficient.
    Installers like to push the micro-inverters because they are easier to install. This is why nearly all leased systems are of this style.

  • @brysonfry9612
    @brysonfry9612 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I have a 20 kw solar system I installed last year, and I used two 10 kw+ string inverters. One is a SolarEdge and required 25 power optimizers which can be expensive as he says in the video, I got mine off eBay for about $45 per (which is about 1/3 new price). The second inverter is part of the FORD Home integration system for my FORD lightning and what’s awesome about it, is that it’s a delta inverter and does not require power optimizers. I have 0 shade where my install is and so far, 7 months in, the 25 panels on the delta inverter have produced 97% as much electricity as the more expensive SolarEdge system. Plus I have a 131 kWh battery back up with my Ford Lightning which is about 10 tesla powerwalls plus I get to drive it around 😂. The truck provides enough power to run everything except my emergency heat, so it’s a no brainer for anyone installing a new solar system, wanting battery back up, and interested or able to purchase a ford lightning.

  • @kurtzxcvb3481
    @kurtzxcvb3481 Před 8 měsíci +1

    If you add a heat pump water heater keep your old tank and use it as an additional reservoir by tying into the drain plug of it you can double your capacity

  • @wisdomleader85
    @wisdomleader85 Před 8 měsíci +3

    16:18 One other factor to consider is that the average lifespan for solar panels is 25-30 years, so in general, it's still a better deal than conventional power networks.

    • @Rhaspun
      @Rhaspun Před 7 měsíci +3

      Yes. The efficiency may fall but it but it's not a huge drop off after 25 years.

  • @vladvoinea2118
    @vladvoinea2118 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Nice video, but some details were lost in translation:
    - hoymiles default warranty is 144 months (12 years) worldwide with the exception being USA market where indeed is 300months (25 years)
    - terms and conditions apply (for all manufacturers). The small font print becomes interesting when things go south, so do not ignore those
    - above 10 years warranty is commmon for big manufacturers, and is not a Hoymiles benefit: SolarEdge up to 24 years, SMA 10+5 (after online registration), Enphase 25 years (can differ per device and/or date of purchase
    - micro inverters have indeed advantages but “they work less than a string inverter and thus lasts longer” is false. You are overselling in my opinion. Maybe the partnership with Hoymiles is blinding you? A 400W micro inverter with 400W panel will work the same as a 5K string inverter with 5KW of panels. Right?
    Other curiosities of mine:
    - How is the Hoymiles integration with other brands when adding batteries?
    - can the system be activated without internet access? (Think off-grid?)
    - can you access the stats without internet? (Aka. Local only?)

    • @junkerzn7312
      @junkerzn7312 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yes, and warranties kinda mean buckus anyway. Take Solar Edge. Their equipment is total junk and fails all the time. The warranty doesn't save you from having to go up on the roof and replace the equipment. Even warranties with installer reimbursements are usually really tough to actually get the labor reimbursed.
      Better to go with quality, and quad-micro-inverters are NOT quality IMHO. For micro-inverters that means going with enphase, and for string inverters... well, there are a couple good brands, but in my opinion SMA is one of the best in terms of actual reliability.

    • @DSC800
      @DSC800 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I agree, good points. The company is new too. Went public on the Shanghai two years ago and now at an all time low (but so are other solar companies). I thought the 4 into 1 would save on equipment cost, but that unit is almost $500 whereas the IQ7's from Enphase is ~$85. I like to see competition but I'd still choose Enphase. (I actually have a 9 year old Solaredge system tho).

    • @fintrollpgr
      @fintrollpgr Před 7 měsíci +1

      There is OpenDTU (and AhoyDTU) for Hoymiles. It is an open source implementation for their monitoring. Works like a dream, is cheap to make and you get full local control, and as you get MQTT out of it, it integrates very easily in most modern home automation systems. And no need to activate those Hoymiles microinverters. Plug in and connect and they start producing.

  • @wannabemedontu
    @wannabemedontu Před 8 měsíci +6

    I'm genuinely curious as to why the monitoring software you are using didn't simply notify you of any underperforming panels. It seems like a simple and expected feature of any so-called monitoring software. I would expect some sort of push notification if any issues.

    • @dannydaw59
      @dannydaw59 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I've got the Sunpower system and they do that. It's just a generic message though. I can't see individual panel production.

  • @jeffking543
    @jeffking543 Před 7 měsíci

    You gave me a chuckle with "[If you're under NEM3] you're going to be a little bit more screwed." Thanks for all the great advice and data.

  • @mybootscamewithoutstraps

    I'm really envious of the Solar options and financial situations that make solar make sense for a lot of folks. I recently got a quote here in St Louis, Missouri, and the installer wanted to give me a small system for $34k, and it equated to around $5 per watt. Terrible. To add insult to injury on this quote, my power company Ameren MO will do nothing for us as far as energy buybacks, credits, incentives, or anything else you could hope for by going solar. It's almost as if they want to discourage it as much as possible so we can all stay on their coal power and keep paying them more.
    Good for you guys for being able to get a ~6 year ROI...That's a no brainer for sure.

  • @randomjasmicisrandom
    @randomjasmicisrandom Před 8 měsíci +1

    It blows my mind how much electricity Americans use. I’m in the UK, have a typical medium sized house and my annual usage is about 3.8K kWh. Granted, I don’t have an EV yet, that arrives in April, but even so I use so little in comparison. As for solar I have 7 panels, and that is as much as my roof could fit. They are saving me a fortune already, although this month it is the battery and a time of use tariff that is doing all the work.

  • @ml.1412
    @ml.1412 Před 7 měsíci +1

    You should use your excess electric generated to heat your hot water tanks. They probably already have electric heating elements installed in them👍
    I think the device you need is called a solar diverter..

  • @darrenmx
    @darrenmx Před 8 měsíci +2

    In Australia we use Colourbond (i.e. high quality pre-coated corrugated iron). Its basically indestructible and good for maybe 200 years. Deeply don't understand USA preference for roof materials that need to be replaced inside a lifetime.

    • @howebrad4601
      @howebrad4601 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Cost. Custom homes use longer lasting roofing but homes built for resale by a builder usually go cheap. Starting to see lots of steel roofs in our area which is a long lasting roof.

  • @johnwehunt4305
    @johnwehunt4305 Před 7 měsíci +1

    We all underestimate our solar. I added from 38 370w panels to another 30 450 watt panels. Using IQ8+ microinverters. It got to near brake even on electric bill.

  • @beatreuteler
    @beatreuteler Před 7 měsíci

    Talking to a guy that knows the stuff beforehand would have saved you from some of the headache. There are also half/half solutions like for example the one from SolarEdge: You combine the advantage of both ways: Optimizers coming w. 25 years of warranty on every or every 2nd panel but still one inverter (12 years warranty?) that makes sure the cost is not exploding. And the monitoring also allows you to see each panel or pair of panels and how they perform. And you really don't have a problem, you have plenty of free roof surface to put additional panels.

  • @lunatik9696
    @lunatik9696 Před 8 měsíci +1

    One good thing about solar is you can expand!

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly8827 Před 7 měsíci

    As an off grid person, I just want to point out that the micro inverters are for grid tied systems only.
    For an off grid system, I would recommend getting a high voltage DC battery anywhere from 48VDC and up. It will make it easier to buy more solar panels and less charge controllers. Outback 80 charge controllers are excellent but you will need 4x as many of these $800 controllers if you have a 12V battery bank vs a 48V battery bank. With 72V you only need 1/6 as many charge controllers as a 12V system.

  • @Rhaspun
    @Rhaspun Před 7 měsíci +1

    Yes. Last year when natural gas prices were high. My gas bill was the big driver of my higher utility bills. It was going over $250 per month from Dec to Feb for my utility bill. This year natural gas is cheaper so now my total utility bills this year has been less than $110 per month since Nov. I've had solar panes since 2016 and it has been worth it. Electricity rates have gone up every year since.

  • @justinsmith2363
    @justinsmith2363 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Maybe don't take your solar output for April - November, and extrapolate that for December - March.

  • @zatar123
    @zatar123 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Just for the record: in December we are not on daylight savings time we are on standard time.

    • @nathanahubbard1975
      @nathanahubbard1975 Před 8 měsíci +1

      And it's actually called Daylight Saving Time

    • @phenom354
      @phenom354 Před 8 měsíci

      for the record@@nathanahubbard1975

  • @stephenng2301
    @stephenng2301 Před 8 měsíci +8

    Would be good to take a look at your NEM contract with SDG&E. Up here in LA county with SCE, our NEM contract says you can only add 10% extra KW than what was originally approved. If you go over that added percentage, the utility can technically change you to NEM 3.0 and call it a new system.

    • @oisiaa
      @oisiaa Před 8 měsíci +1

      Not technically.... It WILL convert to NEM 3.0.

    • @ddyoder
      @ddyoder Před 8 měsíci +4

      I'm in Ventura County, but also with SCE on NEM 2.0 and that's part of why I went with a larger sized original system setup. If I can later add up to 10% without losing my 2.0 agreement with the utility I figured I'd boost what that 10% equates too vs. missing out on add'l panel(s) and risking the contracted net energy agreement

    • @junkerzn7312
      @junkerzn7312 Před 8 měsíci +4

      What can be done instead of adding to the grid-tie system is to add panels in an off-grid configuration to take parts of the house off-grid. That is out of the scope that the utility has control over (since it isn't grid-tied). You would still use the utility to charge the batteries when necessary, but insofar as the utility is concerned that battery charger is just a normal appliance. They have no say about what it gets used for.

    • @elmojito
      @elmojito Před 7 měsíci +1

      Don't know with your micro inverters but with string inverters like my Fronius you can cap the amount you want to feed-in to the grid. Helps when you have batteries as the amount you feed-in today with be significantly reduced by you charging your batteries.

  • @jbmurphy4
    @jbmurphy4 Před 6 měsíci

    It’s interesting to see how close you can put your panels to the edges & apex of your roof.
    Here in windy Ireland & UK we have to keep a large gap around the edge of the roof to stop the wind from getting under the panels & tearing them off. It means you lose a lot of area unfortunately.

  • @LTVoyager
    @LTVoyager Před 7 měsíci

    You forget an important part of the micro vs. string inverter analogy if you have storage. With a string inverter, it is like having to exchange the dollars in the large armored truck for Euros at the bank, and paying the exchange fee. With micro inverters it is like having to exchange dollars for Euros with each bike courier, then exchanging Euros for dollars at a stop on the way to the bank and then exchanging dollars for Euros again at the bank and paying the exchange fee all three times. 😁

  • @larrybolhuis1049
    @larrybolhuis1049 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Nice that you can get so close to roof edges and peaks with your panels. Our township claims "We're Solar Friendly" but requires minimum 3 ft open from edge of all panels to peak, roof edges, and valleys. For our roof, with several valleys, that rules out half of the roof space!

    • @extragoode
      @extragoode Před 8 měsíci +1

      Some roof designs make solar more difficult. We have several peaks and valleys that are less than ideal for installing solar panels on, but thankfully have a nice flat garage roof. One installer I got a quote from put "fireman runs" around the edges of their plan because where they install panels it's required, but it's not required at my location. Do you have any space where you could build a patio and put panels on top of it or install some ground mounted panels?

    • @larrybolhuis1049
      @larrybolhuis1049 Před 8 měsíci

      @@extragoode Our home is basically in a 'hole in the woods' so panels lower than the roof would be heavily tree shaded. Additionally our 'solar friendly township' has a low limit on sq ft of panels that are not on the roof. :-(

    • @dannydaw59
      @dannydaw59 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It would be nice if solar panels came in triangles to maximize roof space.

    • @timsteinkamp2245
      @timsteinkamp2245 Před 5 měsíci

      Stupid rule.

    • @larrybolhuis1049
      @larrybolhuis1049 Před 5 měsíci

      @@timsteinkamp2245 Supposedly for firemen to be able to walk around on the roof if needed, so they say.

  • @carnakthemagnificent336
    @carnakthemagnificent336 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very informative - as usual. Gracias.
    CA's energy costs are a purposeful governmental policy problem. We left the Bay Area 18 months ago. Bought a house in Northwest Nevada that is 60% larger, and we pay less than half the electric and gas total charges.

  • @mb-3faze
    @mb-3faze Před 8 měsíci +1

    You could consider solar hot water for all your hot water needs. Solar hot water systems work in the UK so San Diego would definitely work.

  • @brockm4047
    @brockm4047 Před 6 měsíci

    I would do micro invertors if I were grid connected. I went with a string inverter because my setup is off grid. Thanks for the video and sharing your experience!

  • @i6power30
    @i6power30 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I wouldn't not have a gas furnace if you live in San Diego, but it's hard to get rid of natural gas heating in Canada. Heat pump will not be very efficient in the coldest time of winter, and will be loud vibrating.

    • @extragoode
      @extragoode Před 8 měsíci

      We installed an air source heat pump in Iowa with a propane furnace backup. The propane runs 1-2 weeks a year when it gets below 10F or so. If you have 70 or 80 amps capacity in your electrical panel you could use resistive heat as a backup, but that would've required a panel upgrade for us.

  • @lightingnut
    @lightingnut Před 7 měsíci

    I have solar in colorado. The utility will only let you have something like 120% of your avg. electric bill. Once you hit that you can't add more solar and go above it till you use more electricity. Hope to add battery storage as storage gets better and cheaper. Good thing is we have very reliable electric power.

  • @jadklafjkejalka
    @jadklafjkejalka Před 8 měsíci

    I had a planned electric power outage yesterday, it was a few hours. My whole house generator ran the whole time, burned propane the whole time. If I had even a moderate battery system the battery should have provided the majority of power we used and the generator would either not kicked in or just long enough to recharge the battery bank. We have had outages for a few days in the past, and we actually ran out of propane and had to call fast a refill. If I had battery the generator could shut off all night, a generator needs to run at a set rpm to create 60hz even if only a few LED's and a fan are sipping power all night.

  • @aware2action
    @aware2action Před 8 měsíci +3

    You could make the initial investment, even less, by isolating just the main consumers(such as EV charging, and going for a lower cost system) and not connecting to grid. The drawback is you need to charge during day, or need a dedicated battery storage just for that. Also could involve some remote switchover equipment. Just some 💭❤️👍

  • @lawrencedavidson6195
    @lawrencedavidson6195 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Nice video. You could also use separate charge controllers for each array and charging the battery bank in parallel instead of so many micro inverters, but your system works well, and that is what matters.
    Greetings from Jamaica.

  • @socialcycles13
    @socialcycles13 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Hey Ricky, big fan of your solar content! While I'm following your lead on Hoymiles for my new house and spreading the word, I've hit a snag. Despite reaching out by phone and email four times, I haven't heard back from their Hoymiles service team. Where's that "top-notch support" you mentioned? Hope we can clear this up together!

  • @tcan603
    @tcan603 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Curious if different brands of micros, or SolarEdge optimizers have different starting thresholds. My SolarEdge system of 10 years seams to require very little light to start up . Also SolarEdge has the highest operating efficiency of any brand on the market. As far as string inverters go SMA,and Fronius have excellent reliability to 25 years and have actual in field data to prove this, time will tell on the micro's and optimizers.

  • @ken7961
    @ken7961 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I believe With SDG &E if you're in tier 2, and you add over a KW of panels to your system, it'll kick you into tier 3.

    • @karltreziok2693
      @karltreziok2693 Před 8 měsíci

      You can add up to 10% of your system and stay at NEM 2.0. More than that and you will be moved to NEM 3.0.

  • @mattjjacob
    @mattjjacob Před 8 měsíci +4

    When you look into hot water heaters, look at Rheem's hybrid tanked versions. It combines a heat pump as the primary heater (sucking heat out of the air as the primary heater) and an electric element as the secondary. Even with your high electric costs, it'll be pretty cheap to operate.

    • @laloajuria4678
      @laloajuria4678 Před 8 měsíci +1

      backup resistive is stupid in SD where theres no weather problems.

  • @yt551217
    @yt551217 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks Rickie; like usual great info and entertainment.
    After installing 3 solar panel systems on our home in Seattle, my son’s home in Encinitas (near San Diego), and our rental home in Encinitas ; I can say I’m generally happy.
    A couple of things I’d caution people about. On all 3 projects I wish that I’d put in bigger systems. Adding EV’s, changing a gas furnace to a heat pump, having tenants start working from home and doubling electricity usage are just a few of the reasons.
    We are adding panels at our Seattle home and this will require a new permit. So if you are on a favorable plan of net metering from original permit and the new plan will be less favorable (ie time of use factor) or doesn’t have net metering at all, you will lose a lot of the benefits that imho you are entitled to.
    Seattle is 16 year payback and San Diego 5 ish so overall very happy but agree with you that the utilities are going to squeeze us when they can.

  • @dougwelch8890
    @dougwelch8890 Před 8 měsíci

    My son switched out his gas furnace for an air to air heat pump. The gas furnace provides the blower for the heat distribution. The heat exchanger takes the place of the A/C exchanger so the new heat pump provides both heating and cooling. At the same time he added a 14kw solar system. Before the heat pump, he was paying $700/month for gas alone. Now, the solar covers everything and his bill has dropped to zero. He basically has no electric bill anymore. They do charge a fee to be on the grid but he is producing more power than he needs so his bill nets out to the minimum.
    I have a small all electric home at 8,000 elevation in the Colorado mountains. I have a super insulated home so my heat demands are very low compared to a conventional home. I have a 6,800 watt solar system that with net metering, provides all the power I need for the entire year. I produce more than enough to offset my winter demands on the grid.
    To do it right, you need the entire package of low electric demand ( high efficiency appliances and superinsulation house ) and enough solar to generate power and a utility company that does straight net metering. You can get a payback in less than 10 years. My utility charges $0.13Kw/h and my payback is 9 years.

  • @ricksherman34
    @ricksherman34 Před 7 měsíci

    I live in Phoenix and my house is laid out West to East so I already have panels on the southern and western face. Last year I put panels on the northern side of my house and they output almost exactly the same as the southern side because the sun tracks directly overhead in the summer. It drops off like rock in Winter, but I hardly use any electricity in Winter time Maybe 10-15 kW per day which my 7kW system easily can handle... So my main point is for people in AZ or NV, CA you may want to use that real estate on the northern face. You won't have the same output during winter , but during the summer months when you are drawing 70kWH per day, it will help out a lot.

  • @seymourpro6097
    @seymourpro6097 Před 6 měsíci

    The further back in the design process you incorporate solar, the easier it is to optimise yield. If I needed a new roof I'd certainly look to redesigning the angles so that I could fit more panels to the sunny side.

  • @TheWebcrafter
    @TheWebcrafter Před 7 měsíci

    3:30 - Great analogy. 👍

  • @joecool509
    @joecool509 Před 8 měsíci

    Gas rates are regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission, or CPUC, based on three components: Commodity Costs - The cost of the natural gas itself. Transportation Costs - The cost of natural gas delivery. Public Purpose Surcharge - The cost to fund natural gas-related programs. The monopoly is the state government.

  • @davelindgren5245
    @davelindgren5245 Před 7 měsíci

    I have had solar in San Diego for 20 years. My first system was a ground mount string inverter system (it burned down in the 2007 fires) . I highly discourage string inverter systems for 2 reasons. 1) Any shading on one panel is a big problem. 2) You never know if you have a bad panel or which panel is bad.
    You always want to go with as big of a system as you can. The fine print on the 30% tax credit I think is one time per home. So if you go snall and then want to add, your tax guy might say no to the 30% tax credit.
    I have 2 systems totalling 28.3 KW. My electric bill is zero. I hear what my neighbors pay during the summer each month and it shocks me. The new net metering rules are a complete rip off to the consumer. You need batteries to get the most from your solar. As far as I know, the tax rebate on the batteries can be claimed seperately from your solar so you could do solar at one time and then add batteries later and still get 30% of the batteries.
    I agree, with him on the panel really doesn't matter. I love Enphase inverters.
    But by far, the most important thing is getting an installer that is going to be in business in 5, 10, 15 and 20 years. A labor warranty to replace any faulty panels or inverters isn't worth anything if the company isn't around and a panel goes bad. The manufacturer will replace a panel but good luck getting a company to come in and replace one panel.
    I am like this guy, I was so upset by the gas company increasing rates by a ridiculous amount, I replaced my 22 year old HVAC system with heat pumps. I'm not going to allow them to bend me over like that again.

  • @aFREELONEWOLF
    @aFREELONEWOLF Před 8 měsíci +1

    um QUES? Why Not put Panels on the other side of the Roof and use Rams to lift them up so they catch the sun ? then lower them when you have no sun :) ??

  • @IceglacierArnar
    @IceglacierArnar Před 8 měsíci

    6 cent cost the 1 kWh here in Iceland.
    We get our electrity from hydro power and geothermal. Very cheap.
    And we use geothermal hot water to warm our houses

  • @pauldogon2578
    @pauldogon2578 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have a small 1 panel solar, someone who lives within 100m of my house has installed a large solar system.
    My hobby is/was HF radio and since the start of December 2023 my radio turned to QRM ( manmade RFI) this is from 20Mhz up to 30Mhz and the noise is prodigious.
    I know this is the future, but something needs to be done about the noise they can generate.

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Před 8 měsíci

      - lots of switchmode gear all over the place outputs loads of RFI...

  • @BreakingBarriers2DIY
    @BreakingBarriers2DIY Před 7 měsíci

    Excited to see the comparison of micro inverters…a bit worried that the calculation you used for yearly expectations did a straight line based on 8months of highest producing solar…and missing months might be actually less in solar production.
    Thanks for recommendation on supplier and showing the advantages they give.

  • @adyastley6197
    @adyastley6197 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great video and set up. My first systems were grid tied but adding batteries surely means these micro inverter system will have to go and you have a lot of work to do and in most cases the strings will need a higher voltage series configuration. Battery choice and cost is going to increase the investment and lucky if you get a 6 year payback but if nothing goes wrong for 10 who would moan. Good luck, you're watchable and interesting

  • @garypippenger202
    @garypippenger202 Před 6 měsíci

    It's still early days in terms of discovering all the facets of these efforts to wrestle down our dependence on burning fossil fuels. But thanks to your efforts and those of so many others now, we are building a base of knowledge to continue improvements. Two things though: the ease and reliability of use for the average consumer will have to improve as much as every other aspect. See: recycling. And another thing: we keep confronting the same old battles with human nature. Here in Phoenix (moved here to retire in 2021) we have scammers who hoped to take over the current power providers in the state by selling solar panels to consumers, then having them pay these start-ups for power instead of the commercial state-wide producers. So the grifters are trying to get into the electric power business, since a lot of money flows through that. Yet, careful customers are learning that only a few individual households are actually getting a major share of power through solar anyway, after all the detail get sorted. Commercial providers, however, seem to be making some progress through economies of scale and sufficient sophistication and investment. These issues will continue to slow progress, so we really need competent leadership. And in American politics that is nowhere to be seen.

  • @Groaznic
    @Groaznic Před 8 měsíci +3

    Yo I'm not sure I caught the name of the chinese company who makes those inverters. Wish you'd have repeated it a few more times to catch it.

    • @hmurchison8123
      @hmurchison8123 Před 8 měsíci

      Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles Hoymiles

  • @boxs
    @boxs Před 8 měsíci +2

    Do NOT put induction cooktop on metal surface

    • @4-kathryn
      @4-kathryn Před 8 měsíci

      I laughed at that part

  • @tomsgrinbergs8020
    @tomsgrinbergs8020 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I don't think your explanation about PV strings is correct. There are bypass diodes on each of your panels that divert current through them if part of you panel is shaded thus not affecting other panels. Gary Does Solar channel explained it quite well and showed tests done to prove that.

  • @christurnblom4825
    @christurnblom4825 Před 2 měsíci

    For most of the energy companies, from what I've seen, you're better off using batteries.
    First, you get suckered into buying the inverters to feed back into the grid because the solar companies tell you there's a law that says the power company must by your excess power. Then you find out that they can basically pay you whatever they want. So many power companies pay people less than a penny per kilowatt-hour. Some have gone as low as 1/100 of a cent per KWh.
    With batteries the great thing is that a "battery" has a very broad definition. You could get 55 gallon drums, fill them with water, use a motor & pulleys to suspend them in the air and then use that same motor to generate electricity at night as the drums decend & call it a battery. You can buy surplus industrial batteries, like nickel-iron for pretty cheap and you might get 20 or 30 years out of them.

  • @diatonicdelirium1743
    @diatonicdelirium1743 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Modern panels & string inverters don't suffer so much from (partial) shading. A full failure... maybe, depends on the bypass diodes.

    • @jozefa1234
      @jozefa1234 Před 8 měsíci

      beleef me a small ventilation pipe besides the pannels giving shade over one of eight pannels drops performance with more than 25 % for the whole string

    • @diatonicdelirium1743
      @diatonicdelirium1743 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@jozefa1234 I don't believe you, not for a modern setup. Plenty of guys here on youtube debunking that.

  • @yeahman211
    @yeahman211 Před 6 měsíci

    As I understand it as soon as you make any modifications or upgrades to your system you are no longer "grandfathered" into NEM 2.0, which means your payback period likely doubles overnight.

  • @douglasburnside
    @douglasburnside Před 8 měsíci +1

    When I installed my solar system with battery storage, I sized it very carefully to match my usage history. Over the past 365 days I produced an average of 1kWh per day more than I consumed. Some days more, some days less, but average about 1kWh per day.
    I had two options with the utility company for dealing with the overage: they could pay me for the excess, or they would "store" it for me on a 12-month use-it-or-lose-it rollover basis. I chose the second alternative, and that has worked out well for me because my monthly electric bill is $1.33 a month - the minimum connection fee. I don't lose any sleep over the 300 kWh or so that the utility company gets from me for free every year on the 12 month rollover, that's about $18.00 a year. I can afford that.😀
    The house is total electric, and without the solar system I would be paying about $4,000 per year for my energy.

  • @addison6665
    @addison6665 Před 3 měsíci

    Micro Inverters are more likely to breakdown because they are small electronics on a hot roof. So you're going to have someone replacing those a lot more than the companies tell you. It's like leaving a cell phone on your roof, it will break down fast.

  • @isovideo7497
    @isovideo7497 Před 5 měsíci

    The peak output from panels is a couple of hours +/- solar noon, so that hill doesn't really cost you much.

  • @ronprokop3901
    @ronprokop3901 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I’m not sure why the solar professionals don’t offer people solar tracking. You can see some of your panels can point directly most of the day.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 7 měsíci +1

      Not worth the cost. Panels have gotten so cheap it’s make tracking not worth it.

  • @AndrewKuntzman
    @AndrewKuntzman Před 7 měsíci

    great video, I am hoping to follow you on this journey soon. let me know when your in colorado bro

  • @federicogalimberti9707
    @federicogalimberti9707 Před 8 měsíci

    Great presentation. Simple, to the point and educational. Congrats!!!

  • @billienomates1606
    @billienomates1606 Před 7 měsíci +1

    How is it amazing that you have spent 2 years in that house! I would like to know what makes it amazing to live in?

  • @ecidragon
    @ecidragon Před 7 měsíci

    My house makes 1500kwh during the winter per month and 3100 during the summer. It is 46 panels, and only makes half the power I use. I AM in Phoenix, have many servers, and 3 AC Units on this 5500 sq ft house.

  • @elangomattab
    @elangomattab Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for your video. I just found your channel today. I've been thinking about getting solar on my Illinois home ever since I bought my house in 2022. My main issue though is that I'm not sure if it makes sense since my power is actually pretty cheap. (Last month I paid less than 10 cents per kWh including all taxes and fees) I'm already 100% electric and I think my best way to save money will actually be moving to a cold weather heat pump instead of getting solar. My current heating is electric resistive heating and my AC is like 25 years old. If I do end up getting solar eventually I will be sure to look at Hoymiles inverters. I've been doing a bit of research but hadn't heard of these yet.

  • @robtyndall9776
    @robtyndall9776 Před 8 měsíci +1

    So you are talking about adding panels. I assume you are on NEM 3.0? If I add more than 10% to my solar array (SCE) they kick me off NEM 2.0 and put me on NEM 3.0.

    • @jimadams2113
      @jimadams2113 Před 8 měsíci

      You're right, can't add any additional panels above the 10% threshold.

  • @Former_Texan
    @Former_Texan Před 8 měsíci

    I have a large hill immediately to my east, and a much taller house to my SW. Right now in December I'm only producing power from 8 AM to 3 PM. But I installed 30 kWh of storage, which at least gets me past midnight. I'm on NEM 3.0 though. I'm in the bay area, so a bit further west than you.
    Edit to add... PG&E doesn't bill for pre PTO exports.

  • @douggolde7582
    @douggolde7582 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Grid tie does nothing when the power goes out. Please add an AC coupled battery inverter. This would take your system to the next level and make a great video.

  • @billyoung9538
    @billyoung9538 Před 8 měsíci +2

    I just wanted to point out a small, but common error in this video. Daylight savings time is in the summer months and Standard time is in the winter. So whenever the video refers to daylight savings, at least at all the points I watched so far (including the map graphic), it's actually referring to standard time.

    • @howebrad4601
      @howebrad4601 Před 7 měsíci

      Correct. The fact that he is on standard time that is making his sunset so early. With dst, sunset would be later on the clock, more during production hours for his panels. Lots of benefits of staying on daylight saving time year round imo

    • @billyoung9538
      @billyoung9538 Před 7 měsíci

      @@howebrad4601 I disagree with this statement. They tried moving to DST only back in the 70's. It lasted less than a year, because people hadn't considered all the negative repercussions like how many more accidents occur with an hour of additional frozen roads in the AM hours after a freezing night made commuting exponentially more dangerous for both drivers, and kids going to school. There were other reasons as well, but if we do away with time shifting it needs to be fore a return to Standard time. The gird time issues discussed in this video are due to time shifts more than which time standard we use; however, that is a more complex discussion.

  • @JohnBorgJacob
    @JohnBorgJacob Před 8 měsíci

    20yrs assuming the panels work, the company which supplied doesn't go bust for any warranty claims, no hurricanes that rips of the panels. If everything goes well, yes its a great investment.