Price of solar panels has dropped to all time low of almost $1 a watt. For a little over $500 including two solar batteries I have now gone totally green with my PC for an annual savings in power of nearly $700 on my power bill. I've always been interested in solar but with it at $7-9 a watt was always out of my price range. I was amazed how easy it was to install and hook up myself, easier than putting together a PC for sure. I did skimp on my batteries a little and will probably add two more next month. If this turns out as efficient as it appears, I may have to cover my whole roof while the panels are only $110-120 each.
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Though how many batters are you running that can keep you up and running without the panels thru the night? Do you have an equation for battery capacity and your watt usage to figure out how many battery you need, and what size they should be? I been thinking about getting some panels and a battery system to install low voltage led lighting system in my house. I'm currently trending power usage via some commercial grade building automation controls.
Here is a shot of the phone view page I slapped together. As you can see I have to redo the math for my "Projected Bill" calculation, lol
http://www.homepower.com/articles/solar-electricity/equipment-products/grid-batteries
Solar is far more viable as a way to supplement other energy sources than to replace them. Both seasonal variations and daily variations due on clouds make solar rather unreliable if it's your only source of power. But just because you can't replace coal or whatever for 100% of your energy usage doesn't mean solar can't replace it for 50% with coal or whatever your local utility uses as a backup.
Depending on where you live, you should probably be cautious of assuming that June numbers are typical. With the summer solstice later this month, unless June is considerably cloudier than some other months (which I doubt, but I don't know), it's probably the sunniest month of the year for most places substantially north of the equator.
http://www.sma.de/en/products/battery-inverters/sunny-boy-storage-25.html
Still, its expensive, and Lead acid batteries will probably need replacing after 5 years etc.
I was able to find that Finland's gross energy consumption is 83 416 GWh, of which transmission losses are 966 GWh (1.2%) and distribution losses 1 820 GWh (2.2%). That's only transmission and distribution losses up to your power meter, but it would be strange if losses inside the house were 87% when the whole network before house only loses a bit over 3%.
Source for my numbers: http://energia.fi/tilastot-ja-julkaisut/sahkotilastot/sahkonkulutus/sahkon-kaytto-ja-verkostohaviot
EDIT: Also whatever power is lost inside your house is lost whether you connect the house to power network or to a solar panel. The solar panel could only help with that 3% loss caused by distribution and transmission before the energy reaches your power meter /EDIT
Godfred's Tomb Trailer: https://youtu.be/-nsXGddj_4w
Original Skyrim: https://www.nexusmods.com/skyrim/mods/109547
Serph toze kindly has started a walk-through. https://youtu.be/UIelCK-lldo
Let's party like it is 1863!
It's also possible that either what I read was completely wrong or I misinterpreted it.
Your home electricity bill used is measured in kWh and it's the actual power you're consiming.
Billing is complicated. It's based on a rate per kWh used plus some other fees like delivery charges. You also get charged a different rate per kWh if you go above a certain amount. My rate changes once my kWh goes over 1000.
It looks like for network of USA the loss total loss is 6%
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.cfm?id=105&t=3
The number 87% isn't totally false, though. It looks like that's the loss for the power network of Togo
http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/EG.ELC.LOSS.ZS?order=wbapi_data_value_2013+wbapi_data_value+wbapi_data_value-last&sort=desc
So, to me and the operators of this site, it's directly related. If you choose not to use that same definition, that's your right.
However, "getting off the grid" is something I've always fancied and been curious as to how much it would cost. I love the idea of having a cabin / isolated house somewhere that has no phone lines, electricity or is on the water mains - just completely self-sufficient. However, I'm not really the rugged outdoors type, so I'd want my creature comforts - some heating, tv (but no receiver - dvd/blu-ray only), stereo, gaming system, hot water.
From the sounds of it, looks like solar panels are reaching a point where it is feasible to power such a place completely via solar!
I'm curious about a few things:
You said that cost of solar panels plus batteries was about $500 but that was enough to permanently power you PC (running 247 365). That seems very cheap. What sort of lifespan are you going to get out of that setup?
Batteries - again, what sort of lifespan? In the theoretical zombie apocalypse, how long can you hole up before you need to go loot some new batteries?
Efficiency - how much of your setup is viable simply due to the fact you live in Florida? I live in the UK, not exactly the sunniest of places so I imagine I'd need to double / triple the number of panels in comparison to you? This is especially true as the only places in the UK im likely to be able to buy / build an isolated house or cabin is further up north where it rains 360 days a year! (joke, but sort of true :P )
You'd need to have ridiculous number of solar panels to cope during winter months. It's not very realistic to install that many panels.
But it might be realistic to do it with solar powers + using wood when there's not enough solar power available. Assuming you move to the middle of some woods there will be wood available, and it's great for heating water + your house during winter months when there's less solar power.
If using wood as an additional energy source, you should probably also use an absorption refrigerator. In theory it should be possible to run an absorption refrigerator on hot water, though I don't know if there are any such models available.
EDIT: Here's some useful info on solar panel effectivity on UK:
http://www.cambridge-solar.co.uk/solar-pv-cambridge/
And apparently he's saved $700.00 doing it.
That's at least "a few games" if one wanted to look at it that way.
Godfred's Tomb Trailer: https://youtu.be/-nsXGddj_4w
Original Skyrim: https://www.nexusmods.com/skyrim/mods/109547
Serph toze kindly has started a walk-through. https://youtu.be/UIelCK-lldo
In the spirit of *this* argument, i think the "solar simulation" in most games are all wrong. The wave length distributions of our sun is simply not simulated correctly. And why doesn't my toon get sun-burn?