• Valmond@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    This is really nice! This is the future!

    I’d love to know how much they produce, especially during the winter/monthly.

    • Obelix@feddit.org
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      27 minutes ago

      That kind of depends on what you’re building. Standard is currently 800W (2 standard solar panels). Older models use 600W, other models are using 2000W and limit it to 800W. That doesn’t make much sense, but skirts our local regulations that limits them to 800W, but of course generates more energy.

      It then also depends on where you live. Can you point it to the sun? Do you live in sunny Spain or in northern Norway? In Germany a 800W system can produce 800-1200kWh per year. Our average electricity price is at 0.35€, so you’ll save 280€-420€ a year. And those systems are dirt cheap, there are deals out there where you can get one for 200€. That is quite a good ROI for something that you can install in an hour.

      If you want to know more, here is a calculator https://priwatt.de/service/ertragsrechner/

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        27 minutes ago

        Yeah I get all that, but what if I need heating in the winter and have very low consumption in the summer? That is why I’m searching for real world numbers. If you give me some for a specific place then I can at least have a ballpark number if what I might get where I live.

        OTOH as you say, they start to be so cheap it’s almost impossible to go wrong…

    • Atelopus-zeteki@fedia.io
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      5 hours ago

      In the Northern hemisphere, in Winter the Sun is at a low angle, so vertically oriented panels might produce more. As an example, I have a sunroom and at Winter’s Solstice the sunlight reaches about 3-4 meters into the room. At Summer’s Solstice there is no direct sunlight in the room, as the Sun is overhead.

      • Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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        2 hours ago

        couple of things to note:

        1. Not every balcony is southern facing
        2. Most older European homes don’t have A/C yet, so electrical costs are more during the winter months (that trend will change though I imagine)
        3. I think the numbers @Valmond@lemmy.world was asking about involved power output, that of course depends on the size of your array, daily/monthly/yearly differences in weather, and all sorts of little nuances that’s hard to say without averaging out years worth of data.