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Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on June 05, 2023, 05:03:50 pmSo what do we think the current saving per year is Vs cost to install? I still struggle with the payback period if I'm honest.Depends on how the price of grid electricity goes of course.At the moment, with current tariffs and some pretty active use of when to charge and discharge batteries, I reckon I've got about a 9-10 year payback period. My advice to anyone thinking about this is to get the very largest set of panels possible. With hindsight, I wish I'd realised this when I had the panels fitted. With a bit more thinking about the layout, I could have got 13 rather than 10 panels on my roof. I was quoted £200 Inc VAT for each additional 400W panel at installation. From the figures I've got so far, I reckon each panel will produce at least 300Wh per year. At 15p feed in tariff, that's less than 5 years payback period for the additional panels. If you use that extra to offset importing from the grid, the payback period is only just over 2 years.
So what do we think the current saving per year is Vs cost to install? I still struggle with the payback period if I'm honest.
The batteries made a huge difference to the Energise Barnsley project I did. We fitted OAP bungalows with solar pv, and despite the tenants mainly being in all day, utilisation was only around 45% of generation, and that was with an education piece on how to get the most out of the free power. Adding just a 3kW battery took utilisation to over 75%, plus set up as a virtual power plant gave DSR and arbitrage opportunities.
Quote from: RobTheRover on June 23, 2023, 08:32:48 amThe batteries made a huge difference to the Energise Barnsley project I did. We fitted OAP bungalows with solar pv, and despite the tenants mainly being in all day, utilisation was only around 45% of generation, and that was with an education piece on how to get the most out of the free power. Adding just a 3kW battery took utilisation to over 75%, plus set up as a virtual power plant gave DSR and arbitrage opportunities. That's an awesome real world example. For my part, my EV has now arrived on Tuesday (yay!) so my utilisation has gone through the roof. For this week I'm at 88.5% - 135.5 generated, 15.6 exported.
BST,Of course I read your post.You argued the point I am making in reply 79, then reverse your position to say that electricity prices do not effect the outcome!Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on June 05, 2023, 06:27:49 pmQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on June 05, 2023, 05:03:50 pmSo what do we think the current saving per year is Vs cost to install? I still struggle with the payback period if I'm honest.Depends on how the price of grid electricity goes of course.At the moment, with current tariffs and some pretty active use of when to charge and discharge batteries, I reckon I've got about a 9-10 year payback period. My advice to anyone thinking about this is to get the very largest set of panels possible. With hindsight, I wish I'd realised this when I had the panels fitted. With a bit more thinking about the layout, I could have got 13 rather than 10 panels on my roof. I was quoted £200 Inc VAT for each additional 400W panel at installation. From the figures I've got so far, I reckon each panel will produce at least 300Wh per year. At 15p feed in tariff, that's less than 5 years payback period for the additional panels. If you use that extra to offset importing from the grid, the payback period is only just over 2 years. The argument you later make about averages is beside the point, because the situation is evolving very quickly.We can hold different opinions without difficulty in my book.
I don't tend to look at my actual bill at the minute as I know I'm exporting more than I'm using, so I'm just making a direct debit of £1 a month into my Octopus account to keep the dd going. I just tend to look at my generation and utilisation numbers to get an overall monthly benefit amount.So for me June looks like this:Generated and used: 710.6 kWh = £229.95Export: £52.33Cheap-rate charging offset: £11.42For a total benefit in June of £293.70That means I'm at approx £1150 saving since November, so I'm on for a year 1 saving of approx £1800. If that lands I'll definitely be happy but should likely also beat it next year by being on an EV specific tarriff over the winter months.
Yeah mine was fitted in September but I wasn't on an export tarrif until November so I missed out on about 6 weeks...so I'm taking November to November as the first year. It feels more accurate that way. Another reason I don't focus on the bills is because comparing with previous years doesn't mean anything in my circumstance because my usage has changed hugely for a variety of reasons.In terms of payback period you're better off if energy is more expensive - if by some miracle energy prices dropped to pre-Covid levels it would take a lot longer for your system to pay itself off.An easy comparison based on last months figures is that £229.95 saving last month would be £207.94 for this month as a result of the unit price drop a couple of days ago.
This is a useful website by the way. Real time data from National Grid on the amount of electricity being generated by coal, gas, wind, solar etc, plus the current market rate for electricity and the amount of CO2 generated per unit.https://grid.iamkate.com/
Ldr.No. I don't have off street parking so I can't get a charger that would make me eligible for the low overnight Octopus tariffs. I'd do it like a shot if I could. It's a no-brainer. How much electricity do you typically use?
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on October 06, 2023, 02:21:55 pmLdr.No. I don't have off street parking so I can't get a charger that would make me eligible for the low overnight Octopus tariffs. I'd do it like a shot if I could. It's a no-brainer. How much electricity do you typically use?Currently around 6700 kWh per year with a phev