Any suggestions/recommendations for efficient, reliable, robust panels?
I heard 16% efficiency mentioned recently. Does that come with a high price tag or low reliability?
Choosing solar PV panels
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Choosing solar PV panels
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Efficiency does not matter much in most cases as sunlight is free and "wasting" it does not matter unlike the inefficient use of coal or gas.
Of geater importance is the power produced per £ invested, not the power produced per unit area.
Lower efficiency modules will need to be larger or more numerous for a given output, and therefore any racks or supports will be more costly.
The cost of these is normally a small part of the cost.
If only limited roof space is available, then higher efficiency modules will give more power from a limited area.
In most cases the available money is the limit, not the roof space.
Of geater importance is the power produced per £ invested, not the power produced per unit area.
Lower efficiency modules will need to be larger or more numerous for a given output, and therefore any racks or supports will be more costly.
The cost of these is normally a small part of the cost.
If only limited roof space is available, then higher efficiency modules will give more power from a limited area.
In most cases the available money is the limit, not the roof space.
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We've just bought 16 Sanyo panels, which have an efficiency of about 18%. If you use Enecsys microinverters, the overall output of the array can be boosted by 5% to 20% compared to what you'd get with a standard string inverter. The exact figure depends on how of a shading problem you have (i.e. it outperforms a string inverter by a greater degree the worse your shading problem is).
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Are solar PV panels a uniform size?
The surveyor today said the panels that the company he is subcontracted to put up are 1m by 1½m. They are Zen panels, made in Belgium (apparently) and use self-cleaning Pilkington K glass.
The roof area is some 9m wide by 4m. That includes some areas shaded early in the morning. Area unshaded is probably about 7m by 3m - or space for 14 of the panels that the installation company puts up.
Our annual electricity use has varied. More recently it has been about 4,000kWh (or more). I would hope to be able to get it down to about 3,000kWh (weather permitting) - it used to be about 1,500kWh!
The roof is orientated about WSW (actually +60 degrees from south) and the pitch is some 20 degrees.
The surveyor today said the panels that the company he is subcontracted to put up are 1m by 1½m. They are Zen panels, made in Belgium (apparently) and use self-cleaning Pilkington K glass.
The roof area is some 9m wide by 4m. That includes some areas shaded early in the morning. Area unshaded is probably about 7m by 3m - or space for 14 of the panels that the installation company puts up.
Our annual electricity use has varied. More recently it has been about 4,000kWh (or more). I would hope to be able to get it down to about 3,000kWh (weather permitting) - it used to be about 1,500kWh!
The roof is orientated about WSW (actually +60 degrees from south) and the pitch is some 20 degrees.
I'm hippest, no really.
- biffvernon
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