strad wrote: ↑13 Dec 2020, 01:00
I cannot get a screen shot to post for some reason. The following is from the site you linked....and is their standard setup.
DC System Size (kW):4
Tilt (deg):
20
Azimuth (deg):
180
Ok, 4kW is pretty small and imo anything under 5kW is pointless - especially if your usage is high like ours (we use 11 to 13 MWh's per year).
Try putting in 10kW (assuming you have the roof space) and change the tilt to match your roof pitch. I'm guessing yours would be more like 30 deg if you live in higher latitudes. Also try to get the Azimuth as close to your South facing roof angle as you can.
In my case I have my system split over 2 different roof sections - as I'm in the Southern Hemisphere I went with NE / NW with the NW facing panels being the larger array.
"System output may range from 4,187 to 4,535 kWh per year near this location."
This is actually not bad for 4kW, If I apply the same settings (but N facing) to my location I only get an extra 700 kWh's per year. If I use my actual system size the estimation is within 200 kWh's of my production for last year.
If I bump it up to a 10 kW array it estimates 13,013 kWh/Year which would cover 100% of my annual usage. I'll prolly extend mine at some point as I do have more roof I can use. However, I couldn't afford to go bigger at the time. Still worth it for me as it cut my bills in half.
I can't talk to price because it varies so wildly from country to country, as do incentives - what I can say tho is don't go cheap, get high-quality
Tier 1 panels (eg LG, SunPower) and a
Tier 1 Solar inverter (Fronius, SMA, SolarEdge - ignore micro inverters unless you have shading issues, otherwise they arent worth the price premium).
EDIT: Price directly feeds into Pay Back time too - my system cost me $5,300 AUD after Federal and State rebates. In simple terms that means my pay-back time is 3.5 years - everything after that is free power!