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Cake day: June 22nd, 2023

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  • I can fully understand the roof part, that you can always get a roofing contractor for installing they will do it for a lot less and likely much better than a solar installer will. But the wiring is incredibly simple there’s literally just positive and negative on the solar panels. You just put them in series until you hit your desired voltage, then parallel strings after that. Solar panels use nice simple connectors that literally just click together, you plug those into some nice disconnect switches near the inverter and then from the switch to the inverter.


  • I did explicitly specify a non grid tie unit. An off-grid unit that does not do any grid feedback is literally no different than plugging a UPS in to back up your computer in terms of the impact on the grid . It will accept the grid as an input to pass through but it will never feed power back into the grid thus a lot of the red tape goes away.

    Maybe it’s different in the UK but for the US a self consumption off grid inverter you do not need to even inform the power company much less be any type of electrician it’s only if you are doing a grid tie inverter that will put power back into the grid that suddenly there’s a lot of requirements.


  • DIY is the way to go. You will be able to get a dramatically larger system for the same price. I do not recommend grid tie it’s not worth the rebate there’s a ton of red tape and you will have to install an insane amount of extra equipment if you want to be able to actually have power during a power outage. Using an off-grid inverter with self consumption means that it’s basically just a computer UPS on steroids and it also removes a ton of the installation red tape that exists for grid tie inverters.

    They are actually quite simple to install correctly to code and then for extra piece of mind you can have it inspected by an electrician which is way way cheaper than having them do the installation. I decided to spend roughly $20,000 on solar and for that money I got an entire pallet of solar panels 50 of them 30 KW hours of battery and 12kWh of inverter output.

    Getting the solar panels installed is a hell of a lot of manual labor that’s for sure definitely one of the better workouts I’ve had in a while but when I compared what any solar installer in my area would give me for that price? It was a fraction of the system less than half the total solar panel output half the inverter output no batteries and most companies don’t want to talk to you about a system unless it’s gridtied.