GreenKnight121
Senior Airman
- 734
- Mar 16, 2014
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
Yeah, that layout doesn't look good.And that photo doesn't fill me with confidence in whoever installed it - National Electrical Code requires at least 3' lateral separation between gas meters and electrical equipment (which includes batteries)!
For 9 months of the year, it would generate power. During the summer, It would produce a lot of power.Since I live in an Apartment, I, alone, can't decide what to do!!!
But, back in My Grandmother's home... My relatives have installed one or two, a few years ago. They're working fine, AFAIK.
BTW, I don't think this would be practical on many cities / areas of Northern Europe / America, specially near the Pole.
I was thinking of building a fitness center next to a laundromat. The customers could exercise while their clothes were being washed and dried and it could be powered by the exercise equipment. They would have an extra incentive to work out hard or else their laundry would not get done. Charge them to wash, charge them to exercise, and there is bound to be some kinds of subsidies and tax credits for this kind of a scheme.I thought that if we could just hook dynamos up to the treadmills and stationary bikes in fitness centers we could have a limitless source of power.
I hear that in addition to the rapidly increasing home insurance rates here in Florida that if you install more than a certain number of KW of solar power your place becomes uninsurable. At some power level a solar array is considered to be an unacceptable safety hazard. Some people have had to disconnect half their installed solar power array to be able to have insurance.I bit the bullet and signed a contract to have a 7.1kW array installed on my roof.
Not an issue in my case. Our regs state that you can't generate more than your average annual usage. Payback is achieved by being reimbursed for power back to the grid at peak rates during the summer months.I hear that in addition to the rapidly increasing home insurance rates here in Florida that if you install more than a certain number of KW of solar power you place becomes uninsurable. At some power level a solar array is considered to be an unacceptable safety hazard. Some people have had to disconnect half their installed solar power array to be cable to have insurance.
I have never heard that and I say it is not true. If you get the permits and they are installed to code, you are fine.I hear that in addition to the rapidly increasing home insurance rates here in Florida that if you install more than a certain number of KW of solar power your place becomes uninsurable. At some power level a solar array is considered to be an unacceptable safety hazard. Some people have had to disconnect half their installed solar power array to be able to have insurance.
Fine with the local authorities is not automatically fine with the insurance company.If you get the permits and they are installed to code, you are fine.
It's behind a paywall. And it's in Florida where the insurance companies are canceling policies for any reason they can.Fine with the local authorities is not automatically fine with the insurance company.
Installing rooftop solar panels can get your home insurance canceled
$50 a year. Meh.I suspect Hurricane winds would be a factor against roof-installed panels. Here where I live, a friend's insurance premiums went up by 4 bucks/month after he installed panels last year.