We need to get our kW and and kWh sorted like we did with mph and miles .Not difficult. Sloppy usage leads to miscommunication, which leads to mistakes. Also I might add you export energy not power. Otherwise it looks an excellent job.
If you have the space go for it I say. Some installers persuade the customer to go for the minimum 3.6kW to save them paperwork but costs the customer in the long run. SolarPV is cheap as chips these days. Good job.
Absolutely, sales people get the sale due to making the sale based on minimal money spent but not looking after the consumers best interest in the long term.
You could have the batteries and inverter outside to comply with current advice re risk firemen.
Looks excellent - pity you aren't based in Germany. If you ever need a working vacation, let me know. 🙂
We need to get our kW and and kWh sorted like we did with mph and miles .Not difficult. Sloppy usage leads to miscommunication, which leads to mistakes.
Also I might add you export energy not power. Otherwise it looks an excellent job.
Great job with plenty of info...
Thank you John
If you have the space go for it I say. Some installers persuade the customer to go for the minimum 3.6kW to save them paperwork but costs the customer in the long run. SolarPV is cheap as chips these days.
Good job.
Absolutely, sales people get the sale due to making the sale based on minimal money spent but not looking after the consumers best interest in the long term.
Not in the loft
Thanks for the comment. Its classed as a side cupboard. It has extra structural support, smoke alarm and no rooms above it.
@@Leon-nn7rnHandy to know 😊
Inverter and batteries in a loft.🙄🙄 Not good practice. Still legal but a no no in my opinion.
@@CiaranCalik thanks for the comment. Although It is not a loft.