thanks
Now every panel you buy is rated to have a maximum output, and you go from there.
You might get 3 hours a day on a year round basis.
You have to know how many kWh you would need to use during a winter day. and assume that for every kWh you need to use at night your solar panel will need to produce about 1.6 kWh to take care of your losses in storage.
You can likely cut your power usage a lot from what you use on grid if you go as far as using LED lights, putting the fridge in a cool basement, a small fridge, using only a small laptop, pumping your water by hand.
If just as an example you decide you can live with 20 kWh per day after allowing for storage, you will need something like 10 KW of maximum panel capacity.
That will provide more power in all other parts of the year.
Remember you need more lighting in winter, so allow for that.
Other Answers (2)
-
it%26#039;ll be a 20 year payout, by the time you pay off the loan on the $100,000 system, it%26#039;ll have to be replaced and you start all over on the payments.
-
doug selsam look up his name and ask him
good luck
you WILL thank me later
your welcome
good luck
