I just found this company that talks about free solar panels for Connecticut homeowners.
https://ecogenamerica.com/free-solar-panels-connecticut/
Do you know if any other states provide free solar?
On Thursday, January 2, 2020 at 10:33:00 AM UTC-5, Fox's Mercantile wrote:
On 1/2/20 9:24 AM, pf...@aol.com wrote:
a) You have a 'free' source of original funding.So, just for laughs, I followed one of those links for "free Solar"
Went though the calculations and such.
Then found out I needed to pay $3500 up front.
Perhaps I missed the part about free.
--
"I am a river to my people."
Jeff-1.0
WA6FWi
http:foxsmercantile.com
On 1/2/20 9:24 AM, pf...@aol.com wrote:
a) You have a 'free' source of original funding.So, just for laughs, I followed one of those links for "free Solar"
Went though the calculations and such.
Then found out I needed to pay $3500 up front.
Perhaps I missed the part about free.
--
"I am a river to my people."
Jeff-1.0
WA6FWi
http:foxsmercantile.com
My Daughter installed solar here in Colorado. Never asked what it
cost, but cost was spread over years. It did save plenty on electric
though. She moved to Florida.!
KenW
But, of all of them, Pennsylvania does have, to my way of thinking, generally good people, generally a good climate, exceedingly good healthcare, good tax structure - for me, anyway, and an excellent educational infrastructure from pre-school throughhigher education. Which is, also in my mind, the single most critical indicator of generally good and thoughtful government. An uneducated population is useless in this world at every level. When a simple device such as a ditch-witch has GPS and self-
Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
Despite the politically idiotic reply from Ken, residential scale solar is generally a bad idea:levels decreasing. And solar angles change as well.
a) It is NOT free. ... "Free" meant "No Money Down".
b) Most of these ads claim that it increases the value of the house it is on...
c) It is a depreciating asset, with, essentially NO value after roughly 20 years. I am unclear on the tax implications of that (there may be some).
d) After that roughly 20 years, it becomes an increasing liability - as it reaches the end-of-service life, removal and disposal is a cost.
e) Single grid-tie inverters (one inverter for the entire array) have a general service-life in a residential application of about 10-12 years. At which point, they must be replaced. Micro-inverters (one on each panel) about 1/2 to 1/3 of that.
f) Only the tax subsidy makes it practical and brings the 'payback' into the under-12-year range. And that subsidy comes at the expense of other taxpayers.
g) At no point in the shill was any sort of maintenance mentioned.
h) Generation figures are generally based on ideal conditions - that is full sunlight, at the equator, with the panels at a clean right-angle to the sun. North of the Tropic of Cancer, summer levels gradually increase as one goes north - with winter
* Is the cost of the system spread over 20 years anticipated to be more, or less, than my electric-only energy bill? You are replacing one cost with another - so it is best to know what that cost is, in reality.
Here, there is a problem: if you want to know the electric-only energy bill's expected cost in
twenty years, the fact that burying CO2 waste must be considered means that the effective cost of coal
might have to be quintupled...
Hell, buddy, we just install the damn things . . . . .
Despite the politically idiotic reply from Ken, residential scale solar is generally a bad idea:will increase your premium by about 20% to as much as 35%.
a) It is NOT free. Just for giggles, I responded to such an ad for Pennsylvania. That "Free" installation would have cost me $35,000 at 2.5% interest over 20 years. The shill explained very carefully to me that "Free" meant "No Money Down".
b) Most of these ads claim that it increases the value of the house it is on, dollar-for-dollar. So, I asked my insurance agent about that. His statement: It does increase your value over the first 8 - 10 years, by about half the installed value. But it
c) It is a depreciating asset, with, essentially NO value after roughly 20 years. I am unclear on the tax implications of that (there may be some).dirt, bird-poop (yes, bird poop), that entire group is off-line. Here in Pennsylvania, maintenance would entail leaf removal quite often, in our neighborhood anyway.
d) After that roughly 20 years, it becomes an increasing liability - as it reaches the end-of-service life, removal and disposal is a cost.
e) Single grid-tie inverters (one inverter for the entire array) have a general service-life in a residential application of about 10-12 years. At which point, they must be replaced. Micro-inverters (one on each panel) about 1/2 to 1/3 of that.
f) Only the tax subsidy makes it practical and brings the 'payback' into the under-12-year range. And that subsidy comes at the expense of other taxpayers.
g) At no point in the shill was any sort of maintenance mentioned. Keep in mind that a solar panel consists of many cells. These cells are connected in a series-parallel arrangement such that if any one cell in a group is compromised - snow, leaves,
h) Generation figures are generally based on ideal conditions - that is full sunlight, at the equator, with the panels at a clean right-angle to the sun. North of the Tropic of Cancer, summer levels gradually increase as one goes north - with winterlevels decreasing. And solar angles change as well.
i) Of course, the sun does not shine at night. For an additional $15,000, I could have had a battery array (Tesla) to store power as-needed. With, roughly, a 10-year system life.to a savings account at 2.5%, it would be worth $62,839.86.
j) These are just the obvious issues.
So, if you are ever approached by a solar sales person - and are into a bit of sadism - state that you are VERY interested, but you would like the individual to present the "Full LIFETIME Cost" of the installation, to include:
1. The source and cost of the panels, including the cost of transportation FOB the jobsite.
2. The cost of cleaning up the mining wastes and disposal of that material. >3. The cost of the racking and mounting system as above.
4. The cost of a new roof (if the existing roof is more than 10 years old, or unsuitable for solar panels).
5. The cost of the inverter(s) as above. And the guaranteed minimum service-life for the inverters.
6. The cost of installation and tying into the grid.
7. The expected service life of the system.
8. The (presumably) guaranteed minimum generation over that time.
10. The cost of removal and proper disposition, to include an allowance for roof repairs (and there will be those costs).
All of the above in 2022 dollars, of course.
Now do a "Time-Value-Of-Money calculation on that total over 20 years, use 4% for inflation (interest rate). Using that $35,000 estimated cost, were I to put that in a bank at 4%, it would be worth $76,689.31 in 20 years. If I made $200/month deposits
Questions to ask yourself:
* Is the cost of the system spread over 20 years anticipated to be more, or less, than my electric-only energy bill? You are replacing one cost with another - so it is best to know what that cost is, in reality.
* There is a cost to be connected to the grid in any case. How much is that cost?
* Which would you rather have in 20 years? A lump of cash, or a lump of nearly-expired solar panels?
Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
No if it's an obvious fraud or spam.
On Fri, 08 Jul 2022 10:19:40 -0400, legg <legg@nospam.magma.ca> wrote:
Hell, buddy, we just install the damn things . . . . .
No if it's an obvious fraud or spam.
No if it's an obvious fraud or spam.Just saying, it's the buyer's responsibility to figure
that and anything else, out.
is that those 'honest answers' are thin on the ground.a) The average consumer knows less about solar than he/she knows about the US Constitution.No if it's an obvious fraud or spam.Just saying, it's the buyer's responsibility to figure
that and anything else, out.
b) The average sales person in the Solar Industry, based on personal experience, has the ethics of the typical congress member, and the morals of the typical Evangelical preacher.
True, "Caveat Emptor" is applicable. At the same time, the Solar Industry, and its Shills owes the average consumer honest and complete answers to specific questions. Certainly no less than that. What is clear, however, from the advertising out there
Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
Peter,
solar and wind are growing, the rest are dead (or they just don't know it, yet)
On 30/10/2022 22:49, bruce bowser wrote:
Peter,
solar and wind are growing, the rest are dead (or they just don't know it, yet)
Not to pile it on or anything:
https://ecogenamerica.com/cost-of-solar-panels-in-pa/
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:11:18 PM UTC-4, Peter W. wrote:
Not to pile it on or anything:
https://ecogenamerica.com/cost-of-solar-panels-in-pa/Thanks for sharing Peter. I read through a lot of great articles on EcoGen America that helped me understand solar.
I live in Texas so I found this information about free solar panels in Texas very interesting: https://ecogenamerica.com/free-solar-in-texas/
Haven't decided to install solar panels on my house yet, but thinking about doing it soon!
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:11:18 PM UTC-4, Peter W. wrote:
Not to pile it on or anything:
https://ecogenamerica.com/cost-of-solar-panels-in-pa/Thanks for sharing Peter. I read through a lot of great articles on EcoGen America that helped me understand solar.
I live in Texas so I found this information about free solar panels in Texas very interesting: https://ecogenamerica.com/free-solar-in-texas/
Haven't decided to install solar panels on my house yet, but thinking about doing it soon!
On Tuesday, January 24, 2023 at 4:46:12 PM UTC-5, Trevor Guilday wrote:preacher. Be VERY careful!
On Monday, October 24, 2022 at 12:11:18 PM UTC-4, Peter W. wrote:
Not to pile it on or anything:
https://ecogenamerica.com/cost-of-solar-panels-in-pa/Thanks for sharing Peter. I read through a lot of great articles on EcoGen America that helped me understand solar.
I live in Texas so I found this information about free solar panels in Texas very interesting: https://ecogenamerica.com/free-solar-in-texas/
Haven't decided to install solar panels on my house yet, but thinking about doing it soon!It ain't nohow "free" and it ain't nohow "cheap". It is the Solar industry equating "no down payment" with "Free". As noted previously, the Solar Industry as a whole has the ethics of a typical politician, and the morals of a typical evangelical
Peter WieckInteresting.. it looks like this resource might be better to get an idea of the cost of solar panels in Texas: https://ecogenamerica.com/texas-solar-costs/
Melrose Park, PA
"...The average cost of a 6KW solar energy system in Texas is $16,620 before incentives and $12,899 after applying Texas solar incentives."
I may go with the zero-down option but I've been told there are drawbacks to that option.
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