
 Originally Posted by 
dobbo
					 
				 
				you are forgetting about all the hidden costs associated with photovoltiac setups. 
Maximum lifespan of panels = 25yrs, but they do degrade over time, the best way would be to replace them after 15yrs with new ones
My panels are 14 years old, and have shown no measurable decrease in output. Two out of a total of twenty panels have failed out of warranty. Theere would seem to be no justification for suggesting a 15 year replacement time period.
Battery banks are the same degrading over time and they are not cheap, they make D2 batteries look dirt cheap
Batteries are the real killer - I have 24 cellsand last time I looked the price was around $500 each.
Controllers again not a cheap excercise, they only have a couple of years worth of warrantee
Despite only a couple of years warranty, mine have given no trouble in fourteen years, and I do not expect them to. Also, compared to the rest of the system, they are cheap (a replacement for mine would be $230 for one brand, as an example. If I ran on 12 instead of 24v, a suitable one would be less than $100.
Inverters same situation, unless you go to the expense of buying low voltage appliances, no plasma screens in that shop, nor air conditioners.
My inverters have given no trouble out of warranty (one failed after the first day). They are now less than half the price they were fourteen years ago, and probably better as well. I would not even consider using low voltage appliances, (although my house has 12v distributed it is used only for the UHF), as they are very expensive and there is very little choice - for the same money overall you can spend the money you save on appliances on a bigger solar system to cope with the inefficiency of the inverter. But you can forget airconditioning for any realistic solar photovoltaic system, same with a coolroom.
Having your house rewired to run 12v, and having a gen set for backup, is not an option for me, I have mates who live like this. 
The 28c/kw profit would be swallowed up by your ongoing running costs, then no doubt there would be a tax associated with the profit. You could not make money from this sham.
I'll go along with this, but bear in mind that the price of grid power can be expected to increase fairly dramatically with carbon emission trading, so the economics are only going to get better.
You not only have to have the technology and sit back and rake in the dosh, you  have to change your lifestyle to make this work out in your favour.
Agreed. Also, you need to be reasonably technically knowledgeable, particularly if you are out  of town, otherwise you will end up spending a fortune on paying experts to fix things like loose connections or the panels being shaded by trees, or other simple problems - particularly batteries need a fair bit of attention.
			
		 
	
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