I have had a pretty good year with the solar business thus far. Therefore, I decided to roll some of this year’s profits into our own Photovoltaic (PV) system. This idea has been batted about before, including as a battery back up for the sump pumps, however, a few things have developed since then.
First of all, as technology often does, newer things are available these days that make a solar system in the North East a better proposition. Secondly, the solar business has done better than I expected. As a result, I don’t often have much time to work on household projects. That means that this years “capital improvement” budget has gone unspent for the most part. Finally, I would like to offset some of the extra income tax from the profits. What better way than to invest in the technology myself. The Federal Government offers a 30% income tax incentive and the NY State government offers a 25% tax income incentive up to $5,000.00. This will cut the overall cost of the installed system by almost 50%.
There are a number of considerations:
- How large of a system should be installed. I decided that I wanted to offset 70-80% of my annual electrical use. In this climate and environment, that equates to about 4.1 KW DC PV system. This leaves a little downward room in case I decide to replace the electric stove with a gas unit.
- Where can it be installed. Since the south facing roof has the solar hot water system, the PV system needs to be mounted on a sun shade type structure in the yard.
- What type of technology. I was initially looking at a grid tied with battery back up, however, after I looked into the newest type of inverter, the Enphase microverter, I decided that this was the way to go. A battery backup can be added at a later date.
The Enphase microverters are really cool. The way this system works is every solar panel has its own small inverter instead of one large inverter for many panels. The advantages of this type of system are thus: In conventional system, shading of one panel can cause the entire solar array to turn off, making it ineffective. With the microverters, the shaded panel may turn off, but the rest of the unshaded panels still put out full power. In the Northeast, trees grow everywhere, it is nearly impossible to have a completely shade free site, nor should home owner’s be expected to clear cut their lots to accommodate a PV system. The Enphase microverters mitigate some of those concerns.
Also, multiple inverters create redundancy. Any one inverter can fail, leaving the other nineteen still operational. There is automatic web monitoring for a small annual fee, or the modules can be monitored manually. I may write a small web based program to monitor and post my energy output here. The inverters themselves carry a 15 year warranty, whereas most other inverters carry a 5 year warranty.
Finally, there are no DC voltage losses to account for, making the entire system operate much more efficiently.
In anycase, the order has been signed, checks have been written and the excavator has been reserved for this weekend. The first step is to dig and poor the footings for the sun shade.
More to follow.
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