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  1. #1
    Paper Hunter Trigger Time 23's Avatar
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    Default Solar Power on House

    I just got a quote from Tesla- formerly Solar City to put panels onto my house. These is a 30% tax credit for doing the panels. Do any of you have experience with this? Is it worth doing? Their pitch is that it will hedge against Excel raising energy costs. I only want to do it if it makes economical sense, but that can be hard to analyze without knowing the future cost of energy.

  2. #2
    GLOCK HOOKER hurley842002's Avatar
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    I think there is a whole thread here somewhere with some really good info. I don't have any personal experience, but a few here do.

    ETA: here is the thread I was referring to, but there are actually a few that I saw in my search https://www.ar-15.co/threads/162952-...ighlight=solar
    Last edited by hurley842002; 10-25-2017 at 15:17.

  3. #3
    Paper Hunter Trigger Time 23's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by hurley842002 View Post
    I think there is a whole thread here somewhere with some really good info. I don't have any personal experience, but a few here do.

    ETA: here is the thread I was referring to, but there are actually a few that I saw in my search https://www.ar-15.co/threads/162952-...ighlight=solar
    thanks

  4. #4
    The "Godfather" of COAR Great-Kazoo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Trigger Time 23 View Post
    I just got a quote from Tesla- formerly Solar City to put panels onto my house. These is a 30% tax credit for doing the panels. Do any of you have experience with this? Is it worth doing? Their pitch is that it will hedge against Excel raising energy costs. I only want to do it if it makes economical sense, but that can be hard to analyze without knowing the future cost of energy.
    Only if the payments you make are lower than your monthly utility bill. Until solar comes down to less than $30 month all inclusive kit, there's no way i'm spending more per month than my mortgage.
    If you plan on staying in the home forever, then yes might be a good investment. Maybe
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  5. #5
    Moderator "Doctor" Grey TheGrey's Avatar
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    We went with solar panels, but not from Solar City. We went through Apex Solar Solutions, and our solar panels are made by the Hyundai group. After two months, our electric bill is significantly less than what it was in the past years, but it really matters how your house is situated. You've got the option to lease or to outright buy. It's important to do your due diligence on the company installing, as well as seeing what the warranties and guarantees are on the panels. Don't take the salesman's word for it, but demand everything in writing. Should you go for it, get names, numbers and contact information, and don't sign anything until you research the hell out of it. You will not be able to escape th electric company and go off grid (unless you already are) but you can sell back your excess electricity and either get a check at the end of the year or some other deal they're offering (I forget what the options were.)
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  6. #6
    My Fancy Title gnihcraes's Avatar
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    Solar City pissed me and many of my referral friends off. Customer Service is horrible when you need something from them. ie; hail damaged roofs.

    Takes them days, weeks, months to respond to calls and emails about scheduling service work on the solar system. Really causes issues when you need to replace your roof and get the contractors scheduled up to do that work and you're waiting on Solar City to remove the system.

    A good friend of mine, had to sue them in court before they responded to his service request. Took months. Not good.

    I won't refer anyone to them ever again.

    My system is smaller and I pay $20 a month to Solar City and it saves me about that much off my bill maybe a bit more. I'll notice it more when the next bill comes and the system was off the house for over a month. The meters show it's produced exactly half my energy.

    The lease options have a built in Increase in the cost just like Xcel energy would charge as an increase each year. You're just placing a bet with the solar system that it's increase is less than Xcel each year. Which should be true. Xcel will increase their rate 4% and solar city rate increases at 2% or whatever is in the contract.

  7. #7

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    There is a house down the street from us that has been for sale for at least a year on and off. Plenty of people look at it and it's a great house, but when they find out that you have to also take over payments on the $80k solar system it's a deal breaker. I'm sure those people are kicking themselves for having that installed.

  8. #8
    The "Godfather" of COAR Great-Kazoo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by RCCrawler View Post
    There is a house down the street from us that has been for sale for at least a year on and off. Plenty of people look at it and it's a great house, but when they find out that you have to also take over payments on the $80k solar system it's a deal breaker. I'm sure those people are kicking themselves for having that installed.
    The solar on one's house is either included with sale or not. A potential buyer can opt out of the existing lease, then falls on seller to have it removed. We've looked at a few homes with solar, who were leasing. The owners insisting buyer picks up the solar lease has taken them off the list.
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  9. #9
    Paper Hunter Trigger Time 23's Avatar
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    Thanks for all the insight.

  10. #10
    "Beef Bacon" Commie Grant H.'s Avatar
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    It largely depends on what you want the solar to do.

    Simply offset Excel/Power Company bills? Sure, it'll do it. You have to pay attention to lease payments vs utility payments, otherwise you can end up costing yourself more.

    Offset power and provide power during power outage? Nope. The lease/buy roof solar systems are built to require grid power to produce from the panels. No grid power, no solar power either.
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