SquirrellCook
Forum Member
How's this for an idea? I know solar has been around for a long time for domestic use, but with increasing prices and a worthless infeed tariff, alternatives have to be looked at.
We just had a suggestion that our electricity bill was going to increase to around £20 - £30k a year. It was bad enough when it jumped to £12k a year.
We had a roof pointing the right way for solar and 3 - 4 kw of solar would be easy to fit. Though that side of the roof needs reroofing, so it would be a pain to take it all down again. And with some thought I might be able to double the amount of solar. Let's say ten panels for now costing about £2k fitting then ourselves. Winter is coming to it would be a while to see the peak benefits. Also, more kit required to use them.
We don't want to gid feed at any cost. Infact our meter charges us the same regardless of using or suppling. So, batteries must be the answer.
16 x 280/300 ah Chinese batteries would cost about £2k that's 11'520 watts to about 25% charged.
We have three phases! So, three Mulitipluse's producing 10kva each £9k So maybe just one phase at a time. Not forgetting each one with a current clamp to prevent infeeding.
Cheapest start seems to be Batteries and one Multiplus and take advantage of 10 pence cheaper per unit electricity at night.
It seems to be a stupid amount of money for the whole setup, but it still looks like less than a year's electricity.
Do you think it would work, or have I got my numbers wrong?
We just had a suggestion that our electricity bill was going to increase to around £20 - £30k a year. It was bad enough when it jumped to £12k a year.
We had a roof pointing the right way for solar and 3 - 4 kw of solar would be easy to fit. Though that side of the roof needs reroofing, so it would be a pain to take it all down again. And with some thought I might be able to double the amount of solar. Let's say ten panels for now costing about £2k fitting then ourselves. Winter is coming to it would be a while to see the peak benefits. Also, more kit required to use them.
We don't want to gid feed at any cost. Infact our meter charges us the same regardless of using or suppling. So, batteries must be the answer.
16 x 280/300 ah Chinese batteries would cost about £2k that's 11'520 watts to about 25% charged.
We have three phases! So, three Mulitipluse's producing 10kva each £9k So maybe just one phase at a time. Not forgetting each one with a current clamp to prevent infeeding.
Cheapest start seems to be Batteries and one Multiplus and take advantage of 10 pence cheaper per unit electricity at night.
It seems to be a stupid amount of money for the whole setup, but it still looks like less than a year's electricity.
Do you think it would work, or have I got my numbers wrong?