Three Years Later - We might have a problem
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 พ.ค. 2024
- Its time to see how my Solar panels have held up for the past 3 years. Grab your own Soundcore X600 here: soundcore.tech/3130sQwe ranked number one by DXO best wireless speaker under $200: www.dxomark.com/speakers/Soun... and top 3 in Spatial audio performance out of all the speakers tested by DXOMARK.
Watch the installation video HERE: • Do It Yourself Solar P...
Get $250 dollars off of your Solar Wholesale kit HERE: www.solarwholesale.com/jerry-...
Tesla has been priced well in the past: ts.la/zack10701 but shop around.
Solar energy has always fascinated me. I can put black rectangles on my roof and get free power from the sun for 30+ years? I'm all about that life. Join us as we track my solar journey on year three with my 8kw system. My only regret is that I didn't install more solar panels when I started. - แนวปฏิบัติและการใช้ชีวิต
That sponsor part was smoother than Linus' sneaky ones
Sagway doesn't work anymore 😂
Except Linus no longer accepts sponsorships from Anker and Soundcore is their audio line of products.
@@engrmoutassimWhy? I have one of their pairs of headphones and they're very good.
@@engrmoutassim I’ve thoroughly listened to soundcore. They’re kind of dull sounding. JBL is much better for the price
@@engrmoutassim ridg wallet ruined it all
damn that had been 3 years already????? ive watch you while you install those panels. and unbelievably it has been 3 yrs now wow!
There was this spanish crown that happened and time flew by
IKR!!
Our little boy is growing up so fast.
Time is flying🤗
time flies so fast
Living in South Africa we have an abundance of sunshine but unfortunately we sit with up to 12 hours a day without power from our national power utility due to government corruption and criminality. So about a month ago we got fed up with the incompetence and installed a hybrid solar backup system which charges batteries during the day and run all electrical loads inside the house. During night time we use the stored energy. The cycle remains even when rolling blackouts (aka Loadshedding) is active. It has been amazing seeing the system at work and keeping our lights and appliances on at all times. Even now that it is rainy season in Cape Town we only use about 25% electricity from the grid (when it is available). During the day we run everything from dishwashers, air conditioners, washing machines, vacuums, etc. all for free. We even use the sun to heat up our water in our solar geyser and have installed a gas stove to boil water, make tea, cook, etc. as gas is fairly cheap here.
I was just thinking about this project the other day! Thank you for doing an update video. I'm looking to go solar soon and updates like these really help
totally agree with you. I've installed 13kw solar in Pakistan and the ROI here is less than 4 years! Due to expensive electricity and frequent power outages, solar is not just a greener choice but a lifestyle upgrade too!
Same. Have a 5kw setup here. We don't really use that much electricity.
Also damn the prices skyrocketed after the "other guys came into power" so did the taxes 😮😢
Are you able to buy wheat
@@himanshugehlot1408 Bro what kind of question is that?
@@qaassimmahmood548don't worry, he's just a random Indian tryna be funny
@@himanshugehlot1408 Seems like you didn't have your medicine this morning, and by medicine, I meant cow-piss.
Great update! I wouldn't be too worried about what appears to be a downward trend. A better weather year and you may have the biggest year ever.
Good to know!
did you know a moby is the collective noun for a group of bald men? Anyway, I diverse.
The materials to make the solar panels also create a lot of carbon and destroy land. What we need is more nuclear energy.
@@thomaspayne7617 so do you. easy way to solve this 🤣
@@thomaspayne7617 lol that is silly. both technologies safe us a lot more carbon and land than they use. and so far I don't know anyone who managed to install a nuclear power plant onto their roof ;)
Great update, glad to hear they are working out for you. I wish more people would be honest and mention things like snow and severe weather being a real issue because those are important facts to consider.
I appreciate the follow up video, I am also in Utah so the info is very helpful to me and my decision making. Later this year I hope to be pulling the trigger on a DIY kit, anything you wished you had done differently in your setup that I could learn from?
Thanks for the help, and keep up the good work. Videos are very enjoyable and right up my alley for sure!
Simultaneously the best and worst sponsor transition ever. Well done, sir.
Very kind of you good sir. Linus taught me everything I know.
@Josh Opray I really appreciate how this comment makes clear claims that are well-sourced. /s
@@JerryRigEverythingI respect you, your channel and all the wonderful things you do for others who are less fortunate. I think you deserve every ounce of success you've been blessed with plus more HOWEVER you are not educating your audience on the 100 years of classified aerospace secret off the books energy generation technologies like Hydrogen LENR, compact hydrogen fusion reactors, compact hydrogen plasma reactors and even compact safe nuclear fission reactors. All of which could and should be available to the public. Solar panels are great but they are 1970s lame technology the elite have not did much with to improve over the past 50 years. On purpose I might add. Elon Musk is gaslighting everyone on the existence of several exotic energy generation technologies. SpaceX and Tesla is lying to the public and I can prove it.
Thomas Healy and Hyliion purchased technology rights to Karno and he has the heat to electricity reactor installed on a electric semi with plans to build standalone power generation plants from it which can compete with grid power cost per kwh.
I actually back engineered the karno tech a decade ago by studying declassified Manhattan project reports and wondered ten years ago why they never put the technology on the market as a electricity generator. Truth is "they" aren't interested in people going off grid. About the only people today who can afford to go off grid can also afford to pay for electricity too so poor people as usual gets screwed.
Again I respect you more than almost any other youtuber but you are gaslighting the public with the lame solar panels. Regardless if you know it or not. Also regardless if you believe it or not it's 100% provable there is a global conspiracy to keep specific energy generation technologies off public markets, classified aerospace, oil cartel and legacy auto is to blame. I encourage you to review my channel for more information but I wanna believe you are a good guy. I just hope you wake up as well.
@Josh Opray full electric vehicles may not be the future, but they are a step in the right direction.
You seem to have an interest in hydrogen engines, which is essentially doing the same thing as an electric engine; removing the "natural gas consumption" aspect.
You're, of course, entitled to your opinion, I just feel it's more constructive to work towards something better than trying to rip things apart via baseless slander.
@Josh Opray that's an inspiring and interesting take. How do you propose we get to that point of engine efficiency?
Also, I know what you meant, but there isn't an engine that emits electricity as an output.
I love these non usual videos from Zack
They are the only ones I watch. Family videos, garden videos, not a wheelchair, hummer vids, I watch them all. Scratching a phone/tablet with a razor blade- not so much
@@chrisperrywv twinner !
Hey Jerry Rig … I have watched your tear downs on apple phones for many years… you definitely have a great style of presentation.. The one thing that really hooks me more to your channel is your love and understanding you have for Cambry… ( hope I spelt that right ) what an inspiring couple … Fabulous ❤❤❤
Your video specifically got me to go with a 13.86kw system from solarwholesale and last year I produced 17,336kwh and this year is looking to beat that easily based on the last couple of months. It was very sunny April and May so far, I sent back out over 700kwh to the grid last month. Couldn't have been happier with my decision that you helped me make, so THANK YOU.
13.86kw? How big is your house, how many people live at home or how many electric cars do you have?
@@chrisginoc 2 EVs, 3100sq ft, 4 people
@@greganson3627 No wonder now that makes sense. I have a 6.4 kw system with one Powerwall version 2, 1664sq ft house, 2 adults and 2 toddlers, no EVs yet.
@@chrisginoc When you get an EV, you're probably going to wish you had more. Even with my sized system, the majority of months I still have a bill, albeit a small one.
@@greganson3627 Maybe but it helps having a Powerwall. The next size up option was 8kwh and the price difference was just not in our budget.
I've had solar for 9 years and I tell people they are "boringly predictable". But boringly predictable doesn't get the clicks! Nice effort spicing up the fact that your panels saved roughly the same amount of money each year and that you are where you predicted you would be. Seriously, looking forward to the video for year 4!
cant believe 1 year and all it equates to is 1 truck charge.
@@carphotography No, just that bad December when they were covered all month was one charge.
@@SCRNSH0T can you imagine if everyone had one, the grid could never cope, maybe this is why they never took off back in the early 1900's when they were invented.
@@carphotography how would the grid never cope with a reduced load?
@@jambio3162 so you are saying that if all gas cars turned into electric cars that that would somehow reduce the consumption ?
I officially want to one of these videos every year year. I love these house videos from the garden tours to the giant rain collection system. Absolutely amazing content Zack!
I thought you were going to have the same issue Silver Cymbal documented recently. Glad to know things are looking pretty good still. Thanks for sharing the journey. As someone who just scheduled his second wrist surgery in less than a year, I have had to "call someone" more often than I want.
You can invest about $200 in a brush/squeegee combo on a 40ft handle that you use to pull snow off of your panels thus letting them catch some of those limited winter sun. You could probably reach the bulk of your panels from the ground without having to risk a ladder in winter.
You have to separate 'heat' from 'sunshine' in the summer. Sunshine is good, heat is bad. You will lose 1% of module efficiency for every 2 degrees C in temperature rise. That's why you'll likely hit your annual peak power output day in the late Spring - good hours of sunshine and not yet hot. Anyway, great to see your system is running well for 3 years with no maintenance issues, those little employees are working hard for you!
Hmmm if thats the case I wonder if it would make sense to watercool the panels if you are in a warmer climate. Seems like something interesting someone could do.
They have a solar now that you can run your pool water through. It will heat your pool and cool your solar for greater peak efficiency!
However you need to hire a plumber and an electrician so I can imagine it being extremely pricy
@@Dimondminer11 That's exactly how hybrid panels (aka pv-thermal) work so you get more energy out of the same panel area.
Exactly the problem with my system and I can't stand the fact that a thing designed to be in the sun and heat, doesn't work right if you leave it in the sun and heat...
Time flies really fast, it is like yesterday when I watch your video regarding to this solar panel
Great job on the video Zack! Thanks for making it.
I appreciate the quality of product and intro for your sponsor! I will watch adds like that.
insane to think its been 3 years! Good to hear your setup is still working out. makes me want to do it at our place. Also, sweet f-91w!
Can't believe it's been 3 years since I watched the installation video. Time does fly.
Nice video. One thought many people forget about when installing solar in a warm weather area with an effective air gap is the umbrella effect. Basically the solar panels act as an umbrella shading the house keeping your roof cooler and that heat is not transferred into your attic and into your living quarters, which requires you to use your A/C more. As a result, you save some money by not using your A/C and the wear and tear over time, which may make your unit last longer. My 2 cents...Have a nice day.
Update: I live in Central CA, the roof solar was installed in 2008. We bought the house in 1996 and replaced the furnace & AC unit in 2024, 28 yrs. We definitely got lucky that our unit lasted that long. We also live in a warm climate area. I think the AC is used more than the furnace. But, I believe the solar shade does help keep the roof cooler.
I’m looking for a good study showing the solar shade effect.
I've wondered about how much of an benefit umbrella effect has on the heat load of a home --especially since the best candidate roofs would have the highest solar heating loads. Would be cool to see some before and after air temperature readings in the attic, thermal camera of the under-side of the roof deck etc.
Cope
I love my solar panels! Had them about a year so far and have generated more than expected.
Thank you for taking the time for the update, Zach! We are considering our own solar install, and the information on the half time to your panels paying off the initial investment is of great interest to us, and helpful in our decisions 😀
If you’re interested I work with freedom forever a nationwide solar installer. I can get you an extremely fair price with excellent warranties
Thanks for the update.
We bought an older home last year. Were still doing all the basic upgrades. When I'm ready to go Solar, I'll definitely be reviewing your video's and all the links you provide.
Thanks for all your postings. I don't watch them all, but the Solar and Electric Hummer defiantly peek my interest.
Thanks Again.
Randy
time really flys by i remember watching the vid when you first installed it the day it came out its been 3 yearsss already damnn
I am getting ready to install a roughly 9kW system on Monday, I am REALLY excited to do get this up and running. Likely I will be doubling the number of panels next year and adding some batteries. Great video!
I like Jerry's theme with videos like this: real world testing and results. Looks like solar panels could be a good investment for a lot of people
But not for the environment to pollute making and disposing of them. And of course the taxpayers for the write-off. Of course this discussion is only those that don’t have their ass in the clouds jetting off for another like minded conference.
@@Once_in_a_Lifetime
they reach 80% in 30 years, that doesn't mean you throw them away at the 30 year mark, no you keep them for even longer and add a few extra to make up the difference.
even with disposing of them, it's better then burning millions of tons of coal/gas/oil to produce that power over that time frame.
@@rocksfire4390 So it does nothing to the environment to mine the material and to properly dispose of the panels and batteries and accessories. So how efficient is it to keep adding panels and of course the batteries have to be separated from the others that match the amp of each other, which means your probably will have to double your roof space and have how many groups of batteries/same amperage and solar chargers? And of course when you sell your house, you’ll hope they don’t understand any of this , i mean I’d love to listen how you have to explain all this different expiration dates of battery banks and panel effectiveness. You like kicking the can down the road don’t you, hoping you can unload on someone else?
@@Once_in_a_Lifetime
same can be said and is in fact worse with coal/gas/oil mining, transport, refining, transport again and then burning.
never selling our house, lmao what a stupid thing to do.
@@Once_in_a_Lifetimethat’s just not true here is the makeup of a solar panel 76% glass, 10% plastic polymer, 8% aluminum, 5% silicon, 1% copper. Glass and silicon aren’t mined and the others are used incredibly sparingly. There is less copper and steel in a solar panel than in a toy plane motor.
You were part of my inspiration to start a solar setup. I buy small pieces at a time, its been great.
Great information ! Thank you for updating us ! I'm gonna install a 3 kW solar energy system soon.
Awesome video!
Being a solar technician, always asked..”is it worth it”
RTI is key.
These panels would have already paid themselves off bigtime here in Germany where we pay close to 0.50€/kWh
Wow that's even worse than Ireland where I thought we were really really bad. Average here is about 35 cent a kWh. I work in the electricity industry too so I got the best price I could 😂😂😂 I remember only last year it was about 20 cent.
@@ianboylan1981 50 cents is also much too high for now.
If you sign a contract now, you will pay between 27-30 cents.
where in Germany do you pay 50 ct/kWh with the current capping? Although I firmly believe that the capping is the main culprit why energy prices aren’t going down but let the energy companies rake in one record profit quarter after another.
@@marcd6897 Prices continue to fall.we are 10 cents below the electricity price cap.
If I had this here in Brazil, probably should already payed the installation. Sun is reigning here 😆
Unless there are local regulations which makes home solar panels expensive, problematic, or impossible, then there is no reason not to have a home solar system installed. The sheer and irrefutable financial benefits and advantages are universal around the world.
I wish I could like this twice, really impressive video with a lot of effort put in its Mind blowing
Well done Jerry! I have been meaning to look into solar for our house.
Zack, I also underperformed December (also in Utah, Layton area). I have 25 panels and have had them about 2.5 years. December 2022 I only generated 165 kWh, that is down significantly from December 2021 were we generated 295 kWh. I think you're right about the dark snowy weather limiting their productivity.
Eyyyyyy- my mother in law lives in that area. Neat-o!
it was a dark snowy month... and now, high water issues on all the rivers/creek systems... we have a month of pretty heavy runoff coming... it's like 1983 all over again...
@@chrisperrywv she single?
@@donsly375 uhhhhhhhhhhhhh - nope!
As a solar owner and electric car owner, there are other factors to consider toward savings. The offset in fuel savings vs gasoline is likely much higher than the savings just on your electric bill. Your shingles will also last much longer with your panels absorbing all the abuse. The downward trend is likely just due to weather. Keep us updated.
Nice
solar panels dont really save you anything dont believe the hype
@@YOUARESOFT. care to give us your calculations to back this up?
But you've paid a huge premium for the EV... Having a EV doesn't offset the cost of solar.
You have no savings until the cost is paid off.
@@Robert-cu9bm Having an EV accelerates the pay down of owning solar. And the EV wasn’t a huge premium, it was close to the same cost of the previous vehicle we had. Instead of selling excess solar back to the grid at .096/kW, it’s going into the EV and saving us about $60 per fill up. And since my wife is a traveling nurse, those savings are huge. And guess which direction the price of gas and electricity are going to go? It’s a no brainer. Plus the car has double the power.
And thank you for your time. Awesome videos.
Great video! This shows that they are worth something, we dont own solar panels due to the weather here and we can not generate as much electricity, this is amazing and tells what is good about the panels!
That was a sad start 😂
It's good that you don't need to replace your solar panels❤
can't believe time fly so quickly. That said $0.10 cent kw is amazing! Here in BayArea is ~$0.40 cent or more. thanks always for great content!
I'm using on grid and off grid solar system..very profitable . I installed becoz of you.. thanks jerry ചേട്ടാ...😊❤❤
I have a question, are you considering at any point switching from these regular solar panels to photovoltaic glass ones. Since the regular ones only take in 17% of the sun rays, and the PVG takes up to 80% of it.
Jerry,
I have an idea for you. When I was in college we did a solar race car. During the race we used a pump up sprayer full of ice water to spray the panel and cool it off. When we did the power spiked substantially. If you could cool the panels with say... air gap or a water cooling loop it might increase your power generation considerably. The question is would the pump mechanism use up all that extra power you would generate.
What I would do. have another solar panel running just a fan to cool the panel generating electricity.
And then another panel with a fan cooling the panel with the fan cooling the panel generating electricity... Infinity...
I'd have so many fans running I would single-handedly solve global warming.
There are panels that embrace this concept and use it to heat water for your pool or house. Increase in efficiency and pre-warmed water for your hot water tank.
I'm in north west Indiana. My January was down to about 273kWh. Normally I make 700-900kWh a month. This was my first winter with solar, but has me rethinking if I'm comfortable trying to invest in a battery system for full off grid. At least in my area, my net metering credits are 100% too which is awesome. Only downside is a flat monthly fee to be grid connected (which to be fair, I fully agree with and support).
What system did you install? How much did it cost to install?
@@cheetah476 I went with 18 LG panels with optimizers (6.66kWh) and a SolarEdge SE6000H 'hub' inverter. Total out the door was about $22k before government incentives. I used GNRE for the install; they were great. Nipsco isn't attempting new net metering customers right now from what I remember though.
Thanks for the update Zack. Would be cool if you could make a video about the solar panel recycling. Like what would happen after those 30 years of use. I hope they don't just pile it up somewhere underground.
Good to see you're still going strong 💪 👍🏻
Would love to see more Solar install projects!! Maybe your shop??
Weather is weather, and weather happens. -Jerry
Love the math. My boys and i put on 40 panels. So far we are net zero with some excess t run a 50 gallon electric water heater. You previous solar videos was were i learn so much about soar and gave me confidence that we could do it ourselves
I just want to let you know that you've inspired someone all the day down in South America to install solar panels in his house.
Hopefully, he will install the solar panels on your roof and not "in his house".
@@larrybruce4856 hahaha sorry, not my first language. xD
Those numbers seem pretty good to me. My 5kW system has been up for 4 years, for the 3 full years it's been up it generated 8412/8697/8428kWh. I'm in Sydney, Australia, so about 5° closer to the equator, fairly negligible difference. No snow here, but we had the bushfires in 2019/20 that blanketed the sky for weeks in summer, and the last 18 months we've had record rain and statewide flooding.
Hoping to crack 9000 one of these years, fairly unlikely this year though.
Our system was a lot cheaper, Chinese panels/inverter, been pretty good so far. Only washed once, need to give them a good clean but even dirty they're doing pretty well.
I hope u make it 70 and above ❤ would love to see update around then
I'm glad all those out of work Keystone pipeline workers we're able to find jobs installing solar panels
Heat will impact your production too. They function best when its cool and sunny like the spring/fall months. In the summer there's longer days but it's very hot.
In February this year I installed my own 8 panel system with 4 panels on each string using a growatt 3kw gti ..the whole system was £1268 all in ..I'm an industrial electrician so didn't need outside labour..so far the figures look like full payback in less than 18 months and that's in the south east of the UK.
I believe the future of financially viable solar lies in smaller 2.5kw systems with very short payback times.
Id say they should create even more modular systems.. where whenever you payed off the 2.5 system you can just stick on another 2.5 system without additional investments.
So interesting, here in Australia, our government rebates for solar are crazy good, I had a 6.5kw system fully installed for 1,000$ AUD after rebates
You are absolutely great man! Love the ads too!
Appreciate the insight. Thank you
How has it been three years, I remember watching the installation like it was 6 months ago.
The shade from the tree next to your array also might have a lot to do with it. Since the tree is growing and the trend is going down year after year. I would try to keep the branches below the roofline, even with microinverters shade will effect it.
Only the individual panel though.
@@Robert-cu9bm its still hinders a lot over time lol
Utah resident and just had my panels installed last week with some combo for a new heat pump and AC combo with the panels.
Misleading title, but great update. It clearly makes sense. Thanks ZackJerry
I am excited to say our solar panels are saving us even more here in California! I have only 1 regret and it is I was talked out of getting a battery for the system! I know that I am just not able to get one on my own, I have read up on getting it done even watched videos of people installing them. I simply don’t have those abilities sitting in my wheelchair! I don’t have the funds either. Have you considered a battery for backup and night electric consumption? I hope you and your family are doing well. Say Hullo to your beautiful bride and boy!
It would not save Jerry any money installing batteries as part of his system because he has net metering. Additionally he has fairly inexpensive electricity. Lastly it’s possible down the road to let his Rivian act as a home storage battery for much less money than stand alone batteries.
I'd love to do solar on our roof at some point. Although we're in a townhouse so we may not have enough roof space to generate enough electricity. Especially if we're looking at electric cars in the future. This year though we're focusing on the garden which is starting off pretty good. Hope you're able to update on how your garden is doing this year. :3
Don't waste your money.
.
@@chrisdigital you know. giving a reason why you think it's a waste of money might be useful and stimulate discussion. Otherwise your comment is pretty pointless.
@@Decadentotter Chris must have meant "don't waste your money paying the power company or paying for gas, get that solar roof and electric car today" 😉
@@Decadentotter ill give a actual point to where if your going to stay in the home forever its worth it. if your going to sell at some point its not at all. you get a loan you have to pay off in your name and it doesn't increase your home value that much. I've had a lot of talks with city inspectors and we all agree its really only worth it if you work from home or just pull a lot of power cuz you have electric cars and or have a big family always on devices. its not for everyone but it does benefit some.
Soundcore audio is pretty underrated.
I picked up a pair of their headphones for my brother this past year. For the price the Q45s are pretty difficult to beat.
The scene looks so heartwarming
I've noticed the roofing to your house does not have any heat ventilation, you should definitely look into installing attic vents and vents to draw air in. This might make it colder in the winter but if you install radian Reflective Insulation roll on ceiling studs & foam boards in between your energy usage on A/C will be a lot less. It will be less strain on your A/C unit. Also you can never go wrong washing the solar panels often less dust = more power and you should get your return on investment faster than the speed of light lol
Yes! Very important to have attic vents...
The kind of content we actually need
Its been 2 minutes since the upload of a 6 minute video, tf are u even talking about?
@@META313. he's just trying to get a heart dw
It's propaganda. For comparison your average whole house generator replaces a year worth of his solar array production in an hour or so.
@@Dat_Sun what?
@@aItaccount What about?
Thanks for sharing that. Nice rooftop.
i love my solar panels. our system is exactly twice that of yours(cost n all). we had a bad solar year but already uptrending this year and my electricity bill is $16.75 a month.
Thanks for the Video. There are panels out there here in Germany and Switzerland that are older than 40 years and they have >80% power output still. As long as you do not scratch/ destroy the surface the panels will last close to foreever.
what brands are those, if you dont mind me asking?
@@agps4418 Cannot find the brand. The solar aray is in suisse in area Tessin. If you google oldest solar Farm/ array you should find it.
@@tymanot Irrespective of the physical longevity and the power output of the legacy solar array after 20 years, most homeowners would be inclined to replace the panels after this 2 decade anniversary as the 2043 specification panels will be dramatically more efficient and productive compared to current 2023 panels.
Assuming the feed in tariff export price and policies stay the same, then it would make patent financial sense to replace the solar array after 20 years. If the 2043 panels are twice as productive with power generation, then this means double the export revenue.
Have you considered adding small wind-powered generators to supplement your solar panels? Even when it's not sunny, or covered in snow, there might be enough wind instead to make up some of the difference (and also work at night).
Pretty much everyone says not to bother with wind.
I took the passive approach and have trees surrounding most of my house and spend about $1.4k/yr from both gas (to heat in winter) and electricity keep the house (2-story) cool in the summer (I'm on the edge of the desert by the way in S. California). I considered solar (ground installation), but nowadays solar providers only do roof installations which is a no go in my case. Even when the temps hit over 100 in the summer my AC usually doesn't come on until mid-afternoon and my house unlike many in my region has decent insulation (another way to save). In the end I think passive approach was a better way (plant more trees) and insulate.
just had my solar installed in 2022 around end of Feb. so missing January and most of February, my 2022 energy production was around 6.7mWh. best investment. but this year, we've had more rains and cloudy days, but with 2 extra months of production than last year, I'm expecting about the same amount.
Im never this early. Hope you get this problem solved. :)
Linus has been dethroned as the Segway king
He stepped down first because he knew this video was coming.
I’m at year 10 and absolutely zero problems. Very happy with the panels.
Maybe setup a small patio field using bifacial panels. Those seem to work great in winter month using the upward reflection from the fallen snow. Just enough to compensate for the winter losses.
I don't know who needs to hear this; Although it has been quite rough lately, whatever your financial goals are this year, believe me you can achieve them by investing in Crypto Trading , it ensures present and future long-term financial security. I'm speaking from recent experience
@Glen Julie I know Tracy Britt Cool. I found her on a CNBC interview where she was featured and reached out to her afterwards. over $740,000 from profits made last year more so because her strategy cuts across the major financial markets which I found out generates more profits.
@@therationalnational3326 a google search with the keywords "TRACY BRITT COOL FINANCE" should get you what you need
The United States is nearly $32 trillion in debt. While the idea of solar is wonderful, we need to figure out ways to make the technology more affordable without the federal government footing part of the bill. Tax credits = tax payer dollars paying for it (or in reality, just adding to the national debt). The financial strain we’re putting on our future generations is far worse than the benefits solar will bring over the same period. Of course it’s not just solar receiving ‘tax credits,’ but if we want to start chunking away at our debt, credits like these will have to end as we get back to the bare basics of what our government is intended for. It’s just unfortunate our elected officials are tone-deaf and spend-happy, so we’ll likely continue on this downward spiral until we collapse.
I agree! Let's start with removing the 50 billion worth of oil subsidies every year. Oil has always been subsidized more than renewable. So let's start there
Adjusted for inflation, the US has spent on average 4.8 billion dollars a year of direct taxpayer subsidies since 1918 on the oil industry. Compare that to just 0.38 billion (380 million) in subsidies for renewables per year since 1994. This does not include all of the indirect cost to the oil industries covered by taxpayers, such as health and environmental costs of oil drilling and extraction, transportation, and burning of oil, along with the cost of maintaining such a large military presence in the middle east, and any war efforts there.
I never claimed any tax credit on my 10Kw solar panel setup because I don't want anybody else to foot my bill, which is the sole purpose for starting a you-tube channel for most tuber influencers. 95% of these mofos spam us with irrelevant ads.
The governments of the world subsides help the Chinese manufacturers. The poor in the USA can go without hospital,healthcare,and education. For Nett Zero good work guys any homeless or unemployed in the USA don’t worry Australia and Europe do the same thing.😂😂😂
@@JerryRigEverythingsure I follow your channel but it’s a religious cult you are in. Remove oil and society’s will collapse. People that use fossil fuel pay high state taxes. So if the oil companies get anything it’s the consumer that pays. How much tax to you pay to charge your EV you basically got a hand out to put you solar system in. So you accepted charity from the poor but to convince you its bit like convincing alcoholic not to drink. It’s technically impossible to build enough power stations to produce enough kilowatts to replace the number of kilowatts that diesel and petrol produces so how about a balanced argument instead of what you feel?
Got me on the speaker..lol love your shows.. keep it up.. hope you post something on your bunker
Very informative and thank you for sharing...
Right so you lied, there is no problem. You just made a video complaining that it snowed.
Get nuclear power, mate. Its better
Lol. Sounds fun to me.
I shovel & sweep the snow off my panels when the sun comes out. The reflection off the snow & cooler temps give me some of their highest outputs. A good reason to put panels on racks in the yard instead of the less accessible roof.
Our seasons in Botswana, are summer and spring, meaning winters are pretty much cool summers and our summers are summer, summer. Solar energy would be great here. Great video Zack, as usual.
I’m based in northern Utah (Cache Valley) and I’m thinking about getting solar. Did you have any issues with the crazy snow we got this past winter (snow damming, extra weight on your roof, etc.)? Or do the solar panels help melt the snow on your roof?
I like your takes on everything. You obviously invested a lot into this and instead of only focusing on the good things. You explained the bad ones too. You don’t seem to be justifying this purchase either by only highlighting the good parts. Allowing someone who is serious about getting their own see what owning a system really is like.
We have different weather in South Africa (currently winter is nearing it's end soon in july), but we have power supply issues that we term load shedding aka rolling blackouts. For us the benefit of a solar panel is there when there is no power from the grid. So irrespective of saving, that time is like a party for those that have the means to panels, inverters and batteries down here.
what is the song name from ur placement called? Btw nice video
Ok, so no problems.. good to hear!
I have a soundcore flare and mini and love them both. They hold a charge for years of you aren't using them and their battery life is crazy long. Not sure if it still is, but soundcore was owned by Anker, so I would expect them to be high quality.
perfect reason to look into wind generation. vertical wind turbines work overnight, and when it's cloudy and breezy.
In Italy it rains just 2-3 days per year and there are around 360 full sunny days per year. 30°-40° Celsius summer lasts 8 months from March to October included and December-January is always sunny averaging 15° all days so I think those panels could output 8000% more money in Italy since in Italy there are only 3-4 cloudy days per year
Heres an idea for the maintenance & cleanliness of the cells: if u build a border around the cells, like a tiny picket fence, you can let a roomba sweeper & mopper on there. Maybe build it a tiny recharge shed on one corner so it stays on post working for you :)
gods no...just use windex or something similar
I've had my solar pannels since 2013 and I've made almost 52 MWh. Realy helps with the AC in the Summer.
What are your edits for the template it looks really crisp
(Sharpness and definition and if anything else)
that was smooth ad transition