Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Home Solar Panels?


d-dave

Recommended Posts

Anyone have any experience with that?  My wife signed up for a free consultation (sales pitch) from a residential solar company.  While the guy was great, just a good dude, we had some concerns after he left.  Looking at their facebook and some other reviews, it seems like they are over selling big time.

Suggestions?  Opinions?  I'm curious to see if any of the wonderful people of the Huddle had some good or bad experiences with solar panels.  The idea sounds great, but the cost is still rather high and frightening.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, ARSEN said:

How expensive is it?

$28,000 (!!!), covers all the permitting, installation, all inclusive.

20 year financing, 5.99% (ugh!).  Starts off with a high payment for 18 month($140ish), then would drop by about 30% for the remaining million payments($90ish).

It seemed a little to good to be true.  Beating the majority of the future Duke rate increases, but considering the payments would be more than our regular Duke bill and only cover 80% of the cost.

The sales guy was super nice, and I did feel bad telling him no, but it just didn't add up.  I was curious to see if anyone has had any experience putting solar panels on their homes.  Speaking of that, he claimed it would raise our home value by another $25,000 dollars.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why not go the DIY route and do a section at a time?

From my research, most companies that do this charge out the butt for equipment and other fees.

Also, most PV technologies, to my knowledge, will degrade at about 1% per year. Did they tell you this? By the time you've paid these off, and if you haven't had other problems already, you're only operating at an 80% max capacity.

I would seriously weigh your monthly (or even daily) kwh needs vs. the 20 year investment.

Do an energy audit on yourself and cut down everything that isn't absolutely necessary power-wise in your home. You'll also need to look into heating and cooling loss points in the process, and get those taken care of (since temperature control is probably half to a third of your current consumption.)

You can probably already pay way less than you're paying, and once you've done that, use some of that money to put in your own solar panels a chunk at a time. It isn't terribly difficult technology to understand, maintain, or install.

Think about this. He said it would raise your home value by $25,000. That is current value once installed. Meanwhile, you're on the hook for $28,000 plus interest over 20 years. Even if you immediately sell your home once they are installed, you're still in the hole for $3,000 if you use the money from selling your home to pay off the cost.

The bottom line is that, if you're out to cut energy cost or dependency, you need to start out by cutting your energy requirement.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, d-dave said:

$28,000 (!!!), covers all the permitting, installation, all inclusive.

20 year financing, 5.99% (ugh!).  Starts off with a high payment for 18 month($140ish), then would drop by about 30% for the remaining million payments($90ish).

It seemed a little to good to be true.  Beating the majority of the future Duke rate increases, but considering the payments would be more than our regular Duke bill and only cover 80% of the cost.

The sales guy was super nice, and I did feel bad telling him no, but it just didn't add up.  I was curious to see if anyone has had any experience putting solar panels on their homes.  Speaking of that, he claimed it would raise our home value by another $25,000 dollars.

NO WAY IN HELL.

First off, it won't raise the value a penny....could hurt it actually.

 

Before looking into any of the solar, you should look at smart thermostats, new windows, and possibly extra insulation.

All of that will be a fraction, and start paying off immediately.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, d-dave said:

Anyone have any experience with that?  My wife signed up for a free consultation (sales pitch) from a residential solar company.  While the guy was great, just a good dude, we had some concerns after he left.  Looking at their facebook and some other reviews, it seems like they are over selling big time.

Suggestions?  Opinions?  I'm curious to see if any of the wonderful people of the Huddle had some good or bad experiences with solar panels.  The idea sounds great, but the cost is still rather high and frightening.

look for reviews from other buyers... i bought some several years back ...last year the guy calls me and asks why i havent paid for them yet...I replied," you told me they would pay for themselves in a year!"  Frickin salesmen...........

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 hours ago, pstall said:

Yes. Any excess is repurchased by a loc utility. 

Not any more. McCrory signed legislation to discourage solar by not allowing excess power to be sold back. Helps his Duke Power buddies.

A lot of other states, which are a little more progressive with their renewable and non-coal burning energy, will buy excess produced from solar.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I mean as far as his size goes it's all over his tape bouncing up and down on his toes in and around the pocket trying to see the field and defenses know this as well as we do but if folks here want to live in never never land and pretend it's not a thing that's their prerogative. Even our head coach has made it a key focal point to get his footwork under control. But it's still something Bryce is going to be tested on early and often no matter how many keystrokes anyone here commits to the narrative it isn't an issue.
    • It speaks volumes that when asked to define a clear performance threshold the responses instead fixate on Bryce's size. It reinforces what’s been clear for a while now... that for some, it has never been nor will it ever be about production. Any struggles will always be chalked up to his frame, and any strong play will be downplayed or disqualified via highly mobile goalposts.
    • It is hard not to feel hopeless. There is some hope buried behind a hopeless wall but the hopeless wall is thick.  Going off of the last two games I don’t see how we win.  Team looked utterly defeated on Thursday, kinda like the Leafs did when the Panthers tied the series 2-2, and we all know how that ended.  I hope for the best. I will at least turn on the game for a little while. 
×
×
  • Create New...