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moneymaker
ParticipantA couple of things.
1) If you are getting PV you will have to keep your old electric meter or turn in the new one for the old one, the new ones don’t run backwards.
2) If you are net metering and SDG&E goes down you will be without electricity just like your neighbor that doesn’t have PV.
3)The rebates keep getting cut in half roughly every year to 18 months(depending on market penetration).moneymaker
ParticipantA couple of things.
1) If you are getting PV you will have to keep your old electric meter or turn in the new one for the old one, the new ones don’t run backwards.
2) If you are net metering and SDG&E goes down you will be without electricity just like your neighbor that doesn’t have PV.
3)The rebates keep getting cut in half roughly every year to 18 months(depending on market penetration).moneymaker
ParticipantYes but I wouldn’t do it if I were you! After the term expires I’m guessing your paying over 10%. They have it down to a science.
moneymaker
ParticipantYes but I wouldn’t do it if I were you! After the term expires I’m guessing your paying over 10%. They have it down to a science.
moneymaker
ParticipantYes but I wouldn’t do it if I were you! After the term expires I’m guessing your paying over 10%. They have it down to a science.
moneymaker
ParticipantYes but I wouldn’t do it if I were you! After the term expires I’m guessing your paying over 10%. They have it down to a science.
moneymaker
ParticipantYes but I wouldn’t do it if I were you! After the term expires I’m guessing your paying over 10%. They have it down to a science.
moneymaker
ParticipantI use a whole house filter (from Home Depot ,<$50) for trapping those nasty sediments and a RO system under the kitchen sink that also feeds water to the fridge for ice cubes (fridge also has a built in filter, but feeding it the RO water makes it last longer and nothing in drinks when the ice melts) love this setup. The newest RO systems do not waste near the amount of water that the older ones do. When I was in Iowa this summer I was amazed how good their tap water is, it's not hard like ours.
moneymaker
ParticipantI use a whole house filter (from Home Depot ,<$50) for trapping those nasty sediments and a RO system under the kitchen sink that also feeds water to the fridge for ice cubes (fridge also has a built in filter, but feeding it the RO water makes it last longer and nothing in drinks when the ice melts) love this setup. The newest RO systems do not waste near the amount of water that the older ones do. When I was in Iowa this summer I was amazed how good their tap water is, it's not hard like ours.
moneymaker
ParticipantI use a whole house filter (from Home Depot ,<$50) for trapping those nasty sediments and a RO system under the kitchen sink that also feeds water to the fridge for ice cubes (fridge also has a built in filter, but feeding it the RO water makes it last longer and nothing in drinks when the ice melts) love this setup. The newest RO systems do not waste near the amount of water that the older ones do. When I was in Iowa this summer I was amazed how good their tap water is, it's not hard like ours.
moneymaker
ParticipantI use a whole house filter (from Home Depot ,<$50) for trapping those nasty sediments and a RO system under the kitchen sink that also feeds water to the fridge for ice cubes (fridge also has a built in filter, but feeding it the RO water makes it last longer and nothing in drinks when the ice melts) love this setup. The newest RO systems do not waste near the amount of water that the older ones do. When I was in Iowa this summer I was amazed how good their tap water is, it's not hard like ours.
moneymaker
ParticipantI use a whole house filter (from Home Depot ,<$50) for trapping those nasty sediments and a RO system under the kitchen sink that also feeds water to the fridge for ice cubes (fridge also has a built in filter, but feeding it the RO water makes it last longer and nothing in drinks when the ice melts) love this setup. The newest RO systems do not waste near the amount of water that the older ones do. When I was in Iowa this summer I was amazed how good their tap water is, it's not hard like ours.
moneymaker
ParticipantI suspect the housing sector will not recover till end of 2012. That may seem optimistic but the case-schiller 3 tiers seem like if they stay on their current trajectory will converge around then.
moneymaker
ParticipantI suspect the housing sector will not recover till end of 2012. That may seem optimistic but the case-schiller 3 tiers seem like if they stay on their current trajectory will converge around then.
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