Do solar panels add value to your home?

Do solar panels really add value to your home? The best answer to this question would be, “No, Not really”, however they can sway a buyer to prefer to buy your house on sale, rather than purchase a similar house that the buyer also really likes. The house that has solar panels installed would likely get the nod of approval as they buyer will see this as an immediate $5,000-10,000 that they will not have to spend. However, if Property Investment is something that you are interested in, We have a strong and impressive investment team who can help you get ahead. Whether it be with letting you know your borrowing capacity, Home Appraisal, Showing you new investment properties or helping you setup a SMSF. We have the team to help you. 75% of the installs we have been doing for the last 18 months are from people who have….

#10 You can’t split arrays on different inclinations

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #10 You can’t split arrays on different inclinations Yes it can be done. Sure there is a loss of output (in technical speech, a cosine loss leading to voltage mismatch dynamics because of different MPPs within the series strings) but this must be balanced against other benefits in, say, reduced installation cost and the ability to fit more panels on a roof. The CEC guidelines say a maximum of a 5% difference in inclination, yet most installers won’t even do that. In reality the guideline should be scrapped or increased to a higher figure more like 15%, as long as the consequences are understood and explained to the customer and the economics of a larger system outweigh any losses per capacity invested. Please bury these myths for everyone’s benefit By burying these myths, Australians will be able to buy a lot more solar panels,….

#9 Frames should be used to ensure panels are optimally tilted to the North

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #9 Frames should be used to ensure panels are optimally tilted to the North No, this is old thinking. Adding the cost of 20 or 30 cents per watt to a system that costs $1.00 per watt so the the panels are ideally tilted to eek out every bit of output from a panel is a complete waste of money. With the exception of completely flat roofs where build-up of dirt and grime will be a real problem, flat racking is the go. If space permits, you could instead install 30% more panels for the same price as using tilt framing. Better to install more panels than frame – because that creates economies of scale and brings the cost of panels down in the future! Next: 10) You can’t split arrays on different inclinations Previous:8) The electricity network distributor won’t allow oversizing beyond their inverter size limit

#8 The electricity network distributor won’t allow oversizing beyond their inverter size limit

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #8 The electricity network distributor won’t allow oversizing beyond their inverter size limit Wrong again for most network distributors. Yes, Ausnet in Victoria has this stupid rule and they should hire some electrical engineers with competence to help them out. But Citipower/Powercor, Jemena and United Energy in Victoria all allow oversizing as do network operators in WA, SA, Queensland as well as some distributors in NSW. So if distributor Jemena says you can have a 10kW capacity inverter installed on a single-phase then as long as it’s compliant with Australian Standard 4777 you can attach panels with capacity of 13kW, 15kW or even more. Also by not going beyond a 10kW inverter you slip in under their rule of automatic pre-approval Next: 9) Frames should be used to ensure panels are optimally tilted to the North Previous:7) You shouldn’t put on more panel capacity than the output of your….

#7 You shouldn’t put on more panel capacity than the output of your inverter

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #7 Let’s be straight – it’s better economics to oversize the amount of panel capacity relative to the inverter (see Reasons to supersize your solar for why this is the case). All systems should be oversizing 150% panel capacity to inverter output. Unfortunately the Clean Energy Council (CEC) guidelines undermine good solar system economics. They currently only allow 133% oversizing of arrays, after which you forgo eligibility for the government STC rebate. However provided you are prepared to do the project in two passes, claiming the STC rebate only for that capacity up to 133% of the inverter capacity, this is entirely legitimate. Most importantly it can be done safely and within electrical codes and regulations. Yet what’s even more ridiculous is that many installers come up with arbitrary constraints that they’ll only do 15% oversizing on the north. Others even incorrectly claim that you’re not allowed….

#6 Chinese Solar Panels and Inverters are Rubbish

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #6 6) Chinese product is rubbish  The myth here is that apart from Trina, Yingli and Suntech everything out of China is cumbersome, performs badly and will be up for warranty claims within a few years of being installed. Let’s remember that Chinese inverter manufacturer Growatt is the company that has the largest share of the Australian market when it comes to inverters. They had some issues in a prior run of inverters which got swapped out under warranty, as you should expect, yet everyone in the industry seems to be using that done and dusted story from the past as a model (but poor) case study of why Chinese inverters and other products are no good. There’s also a bit of irony in the rubbishing of all Chinese inverters because, as I’ve discovered, Growatt inverters for instance have better power monitoring than some of the….

#5 You can’t put panels facing south

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #5 5) You can’t put panels facing south This one’s a biggy. I was previously in the trap also of criticising systems that were oriented south, southwest or southeast. Actually they’re great. They’re great if the north, east and west already have panels, as they help enhance self-consumption of solar output. They’re also great if installing on the northern roof is complicated and would necessitate a very expensive install. If you were comparing, say, a system on the north costing $1.30 or more per watt due to complications (split arrays, need for  DC optimisers/micro-inverters), but could get a system in for $1 per watt on the south, then the financials end up about the same and you could conceivably afford to install 30% more panels on the south that would make up for the loss of power output. The south facing system is also a good match for self-consumption….

#4 Panels should face west

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #4 4) Panels should face west This one comes from our friends in the incumbent power business establishment and is rubbish. Systems should face any way that maximises production and benefits the customer. So if a customer isn’t home in the evening, then western facing panels may not be of that much benefit in lowering their personal power bill via maximising self-consumption. Although I think west-facing panels are perfectly fine for most people, it’s not a law that anyone should be following religiously. If power distributors want to run around pushing this myth on the solar industry and customers alike they could offer additional feed-in-tariffs to encourage it. But they don’t. The power companies are just spreading FUD – fear, uncertainty and doubt – to make people feel like they’re doing something wrong or unfair as a result of their north or east facing systems. Yet these people….

#3 There must not be shading of the solar panels

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #3 3) There Must be NO SHADE on the panels OK, a system might experience some shading for some section of the day, say the afternoon – what’s the consequence? Some derating with reduced power output, but the system doesn’t blow up and isn’t damaged. If the shaded panels are facing north the derating could be as high as 15% and the amount of power output would still be as good as an unshaded west or east facing system which installers, for the most part, now thankfully happily sell. Obviously if you can give a customer a good sized system while eliminating shading or minimising it, that is a first preference. But then again you don’t want to plunk the panels lazily in the middle of the roof, which might crowd out the roof space so the customer can’t add more panels in the future. Next:….

#2 You can’t install panels facing east and west

The 10 dumb myths of solar installers #2 2) You can’t install panels facing east and west This one’s a goody, installers vying to sell north-facing panels only. Fortunately, it’s mostly been solved. With the self-consumption of solar generation paying three times more than exports, the light bulb has switched on that losing 10-15% of annual production to gain even more in self-consumption is worthwhile. Next: 3) There must not be shading of the solar panels  Previous: 1)The ‘solargedden’ is coming because there are all these dodgy installations out there from fly-by-nighters

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