When you choose to take the plunge and install a home solar power system there are two basic variations you must consider:

1. A Grid-Attached Home: This most common of residential solar systems allows for the solar energy to supplement your conventional electrical supply. Your home runs off a mixture of solar and grid energy at any given time. Should your solar system produce more electricity than is being used at the time, your electric meter will literally spin backwards as you are now feeding energy into the grid instead of drawing from it.

2. An Off-Grid Home: This residential solar system is set up to provide all of the home’s electric requirements as there are no conventional electric connections. The two major variants of this configuration are Autonomous & Hybrid. An Autonomous system derives all of the energy utilized by the home from the sun. A Hybrid system supplements the solar with a variety of sources such as wind or fuel fired generators. In many cases an off-grid home needs a fuel fired generator as a backup.

Both types of solar systems require a complex system to be installed on the residential building. PhotoVoltaic (PV) Solar panels are attached to the roof, then cables are run down to a series of batteries, inverters, and the electrical panel.

There are a wide variety of considerations concerning a home solar power system which must be addressed in the plotting stage. The solar panels must have an unshaded and unblocked southern exposure (in the Northern Hemisphere). If you are in a marginal location, high latitude (over 40 degrees), or a predominantly cloudy area you may want to take advantage of pole mounted arrays which can track the sun’s position to optimize power generation.

The expected electrical draw of the home must also be considered. Add up the electric needs of all the appliances and tools you wish to operate and the number of hours they will be used each day. Now you must estimate the PV array size by dividing the daily total electric load by the average number of hours of sunshine on your location. The relative efficiency of the solar power array will have a significant effect on these calculations, as will the number, size, capacity, and rating of the battery bank.

You will have to do your homework, as solar power systems vary widely from manufacturer to manufacturer, and even from model to model. The specification fact sheets will provide hard data on the relative efficiencies, and most solar power neophytes are astonished when they crunch the numbers of the equipment and the installation fees and realize that the final cost is well into five figures.

If you cannot afford the residential solar power system of your dreams, there are alternatives. Besides the obvious one of just saving energy conventionally, you can design a solar power system that is expandable and allows you to add battery capacity and PV panel square footage as you can afford them. Various locations also offer financial incentives for solar power installations. Some of these can be quite significant and can help make the choice for the solar power installation simpler.

Residential solar power is still in its infancy and the current barriers to entry are considerable, but prices are falling and efficiency is rising all the time, and you may relish the opportunity of being a solar pioneer in your neighborhood.

Share and Delight in:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

Filed under: Latest

Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!