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sdduuuude
ParticipantPassive solar water pre-heaters are pretty cheap. If you have the space, it could be worth doing. My dad built his own at my childhood home in Arizona.
Just run the output of the solare heaters into your regular water heater.
sdduuuude
ParticipantPassive solar water pre-heaters are pretty cheap. If you have the space, it could be worth doing. My dad built his own at my childhood home in Arizona.
Just run the output of the solare heaters into your regular water heater.
sdduuuude
ParticipantPassive solar water pre-heaters are pretty cheap. If you have the space, it could be worth doing. My dad built his own at my childhood home in Arizona.
Just run the output of the solare heaters into your regular water heater.
sdduuuude
ParticipantOne thing to keep in mind that electricity is priced in tiers.
Your first bundle of electricity per month is priced at x per kwH. The next bundle is x+a per kwH, next bundle is x+b, then x+c, etc.
Because of this tiered pricing, it isn’t necessarily cost-effective to install enough panels to eliminate all of your electric bill but it can be cost-effective to install enough panels to ensure that you don’t leave the baseline tier.
The cost of adding panels is tiered as well. In addition to the panels, you need some equipment to manage the power. This equipment can only handle so many panels. After 30 panels or so, you may need some new equipment and it is expensive so stopping at 30 may be best because panel number 31 costs alot more than panel number 29.
Best to pull up a couple years of monthly usage and pricing data and make make a spreadsheet to see how these capital cost and exprense reuduction tiers overlap. It will help you find the optimal installation.
Everyone gets all excited about running the meter backwards and selling power, but really a smart installation shouldn’t get you to that point.
sdduuuude
ParticipantOne thing to keep in mind that electricity is priced in tiers.
Your first bundle of electricity per month is priced at x per kwH. The next bundle is x+a per kwH, next bundle is x+b, then x+c, etc.
Because of this tiered pricing, it isn’t necessarily cost-effective to install enough panels to eliminate all of your electric bill but it can be cost-effective to install enough panels to ensure that you don’t leave the baseline tier.
The cost of adding panels is tiered as well. In addition to the panels, you need some equipment to manage the power. This equipment can only handle so many panels. After 30 panels or so, you may need some new equipment and it is expensive so stopping at 30 may be best because panel number 31 costs alot more than panel number 29.
Best to pull up a couple years of monthly usage and pricing data and make make a spreadsheet to see how these capital cost and exprense reuduction tiers overlap. It will help you find the optimal installation.
Everyone gets all excited about running the meter backwards and selling power, but really a smart installation shouldn’t get you to that point.
sdduuuude
ParticipantOne thing to keep in mind that electricity is priced in tiers.
Your first bundle of electricity per month is priced at x per kwH. The next bundle is x+a per kwH, next bundle is x+b, then x+c, etc.
Because of this tiered pricing, it isn’t necessarily cost-effective to install enough panels to eliminate all of your electric bill but it can be cost-effective to install enough panels to ensure that you don’t leave the baseline tier.
The cost of adding panels is tiered as well. In addition to the panels, you need some equipment to manage the power. This equipment can only handle so many panels. After 30 panels or so, you may need some new equipment and it is expensive so stopping at 30 may be best because panel number 31 costs alot more than panel number 29.
Best to pull up a couple years of monthly usage and pricing data and make make a spreadsheet to see how these capital cost and exprense reuduction tiers overlap. It will help you find the optimal installation.
Everyone gets all excited about running the meter backwards and selling power, but really a smart installation shouldn’t get you to that point.
sdduuuude
ParticipantOne thing to keep in mind that electricity is priced in tiers.
Your first bundle of electricity per month is priced at x per kwH. The next bundle is x+a per kwH, next bundle is x+b, then x+c, etc.
Because of this tiered pricing, it isn’t necessarily cost-effective to install enough panels to eliminate all of your electric bill but it can be cost-effective to install enough panels to ensure that you don’t leave the baseline tier.
The cost of adding panels is tiered as well. In addition to the panels, you need some equipment to manage the power. This equipment can only handle so many panels. After 30 panels or so, you may need some new equipment and it is expensive so stopping at 30 may be best because panel number 31 costs alot more than panel number 29.
Best to pull up a couple years of monthly usage and pricing data and make make a spreadsheet to see how these capital cost and exprense reuduction tiers overlap. It will help you find the optimal installation.
Everyone gets all excited about running the meter backwards and selling power, but really a smart installation shouldn’t get you to that point.
sdduuuude
ParticipantOne thing to keep in mind that electricity is priced in tiers.
Your first bundle of electricity per month is priced at x per kwH. The next bundle is x+a per kwH, next bundle is x+b, then x+c, etc.
Because of this tiered pricing, it isn’t necessarily cost-effective to install enough panels to eliminate all of your electric bill but it can be cost-effective to install enough panels to ensure that you don’t leave the baseline tier.
The cost of adding panels is tiered as well. In addition to the panels, you need some equipment to manage the power. This equipment can only handle so many panels. After 30 panels or so, you may need some new equipment and it is expensive so stopping at 30 may be best because panel number 31 costs alot more than panel number 29.
Best to pull up a couple years of monthly usage and pricing data and make make a spreadsheet to see how these capital cost and exprense reuduction tiers overlap. It will help you find the optimal installation.
Everyone gets all excited about running the meter backwards and selling power, but really a smart installation shouldn’t get you to that point.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI like big LOTS and I cannot lie …
sdduuuude
ParticipantI like big LOTS and I cannot lie …
sdduuuude
ParticipantI like big LOTS and I cannot lie …
sdduuuude
ParticipantI like big LOTS and I cannot lie …
sdduuuude
ParticipantI like big LOTS and I cannot lie …
June 3, 2011 at 11:11 AM in reply to: Excellent summation why housing market will be terrible for a long time #701003sdduuuude
ParticipantYa, Ya. Happy B-day SDR.
Now, here is an interesting graph related to the original topic:
http://cr4re.com/charts/charts.html#category=Employment&chart=JobLossesRecessionStartMay2011.jpg
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