on โ14-08-2013 08:12 AM
Can someone explain in plain English please, if you have a 1.5kw system, how much solar power is it capable of producing per day? (maximum amount)
on โ14-08-2013 01:12 PM
AL: "if a system is 1.5kw, he said it can only produce 1.5 kw a day so over 92 days it would be 138 kw."
No, it would produce 1.5 Kw only under perfect conditions, so using hours it would be 1.5 Kwh for as long as the conditions were perfect.
Now forget that and use an averaged (over a year) daily output of 5Kwh from your system and work from there.
There are many variables as KIH indicates. Where you are in Australia ( average yearly sunlight/elevation) being important.
For more help provide:-
NPO
Your approximate area/position (for sun tables) and elevation.
Current power consumption, daily and night day averaged would be good (but hard to get) or 3 month, or 1 year consumption.
Power costs out per Kwh you pay your provider (in 44 cents?)
How your panels will be mounted/angled is important, especially as you get closer to the equator. Will yours be just the basic "on a north facing roof" or use a mount to take advantage of the sun's elevation annual variation. If fixed to roof the pitch (angle) would help. I know! what am I talking about?.
nษฅยบษพ
PS
Make/model of your system would be good
on โ14-08-2013 01:20 PM
@monman12 wrote:AL: "if a system is 1.5kw, he said it can only produce 1.5 kw a day so over 92 days it would be 138 kw."
No, it would produce 1.5 Kw only under perfect conditions, so using hours it would be 1.5 Kwh for as long as the conditions were perfect.
Now forget that and use an averaged (over a year) daily output of 5Kwh from your system and work from there.
There are many variables as KIH indicates. Where you are in Australia ( average yearly sunlight/elevation) being important.
For more help provide:-
NPO
Your approximate area/position (for sun tables) and elevation.
Current power consumption, daily and night day averaged would be good (but hard to get) or 3 month, or 1 year consumption.
Power costs out per Kwh you pay your provider (in 44 cents?)
How your panels will be mounted/angled is important, especially as you get closer to the equator. Will yours be just the basic "on a north facing roof" or use a mount to take advantage of the sun's elevation annual variation. If fixed to roof the pitch (angle) would help. I know! what am I talking about?.
nษฅยบษพ
PS
Make/model of your system would be good
I must not be explaining this well..... a guy told me my system can only produce a maximum of 1.5kw per day, at optimum performance because it is a 1.5kw system.
He must be mistaken?
because we are currently getting a credit from our supplier, well in excess of this and we must also be using power the panels are producing during the day.
It is north west facing on a pitched roof and gets sun from 10am through to sundown.
on โ14-08-2013 01:35 PM
Az is your credit in watts or kw ?
on โ14-08-2013 01:37 PM
kWh
โ14-08-2013 01:41 PM - edited โ14-08-2013 01:43 PM
on โ14-08-2013 02:02 PM
Sorry Az, It's too complicated for me to fully understand so that I can explain
on โ14-08-2013 03:08 PM
this may help ? ..info on solar power Brisbane
Solar Energy Production - You will often see various solar promotions claiming that a certain system will produce so much energy. It can be confusing. As a guide, you can estimate the daily energy produced by a solar panels system installed in Brisbane by this formula: Solar System Size (in Kwh) times 4.2 = Daily Energy Generated by the system. For example;
Solar System Size Approximate Daily Energy Generated
1.5Kw 4.2Kwh
The daily usage of energy in Brisbane households can vary from 10Kwh to 60 Kwh per day, depending on appliances used, number of people in the home, home insulation and many other factors.
on โ14-08-2013 03:13 PM
"I must not be explaining this well..... a guy told me my system can only produce a maximum of 1.5kw per day, at optimum performance because it is a 1.5kw system.
He must be mistaken?
because we are currently getting a credit from our supplier, well in excess of this and we must also be using power the panels are producing during the day.
It is north west facing on a pitched roof and gets sun from 10am through to sundown."
Your "guy" does not understand basic electrical power use terms. The term for electrical power use is kWh, h = HOUR.
The system can produce 1.5 Kw under perfect conditions, but the amount of power used depends on how long in HOURS it produces this, so for 2 hours of perfect conditions it would produce 3KWh
However the system is not perfect and the sunlight varies: angle/intensity and day/night./season So leaving out the technical stuff we arrive at an approximate accepted figure of 5-6 kWh produced PER DAY for a 1.5 Kw system (assumed variables) averaged over a year.
It could be better or worse , but the information you have provided is of little use for calculating further..
North facing is the most efficient, whilst a NW alignment will produce reduced power.
nษฅยบษพ
on โ14-08-2013 03:28 PM
Thanks Iza, that helps a lot.
Thanks also Monman, I thought he was in error as well and he at no time professed to be commercially knowledgable about it. ( as in he doesn't sell it etc) I don't like to call people out on it when they offer info and I wanted to be sure I was more informed.
I would not be happy to pay out for a system that didn't produce at least 25% of our daily energy use. (It does more than that on average)