I guess I am, I have a solar powered pump and it works great!
Well, let me backup and explain. I have a plain old Hayward Super-II pump with a 1.5HP 220V motor. It runs off my household electricity, but that is fed from both the grid and a 10,000 Watt PV array on my roof. So, effectively I have a solar powered pump.
Solar panels are expensive. Without a rebate they will run you around $7 a watt without the inverters. If you live in a state like NJ, they can make sense. When I put mine in the rebates were 70% of system cost, I think they are now only about 45%.
Panels are projected to last 20+ years and the system I have has a payback of just under 4 years. I am almost 3 years into having it and it works great. It generates about 1200 kwh per month.
Cleancloths,
That sounds pretty neat. I'm curious about how many square feet of arrays you use for that 10 KW? I also assume you feed back into the grid so that eliminates the battery issue. A friend is looking at acquiring a property in a remote area of the Catskills that has no utilities and he's kicking around solar cells as a power source. He would have to deal with batteries though. Since you have a good history so far I'd appreciate any links with more info.
Thanks.
Al
I'm not sure I recall the exact size of the panels, but they are roughly 30" by about 52". I have 54 of them each rated at 185watts. They connect to 4 Sunnyboy inverters and as you guessed are grid-tied, so the grid is my battery. Battery systems are very expensive and not that reliable as the batteries have to be periodially replaced. I was adviced not to install such a system, and if we had problems of power failures it would be cheaper and better to install an auxilary generator. Check out the NJ state webpage to get the link to their clean energy site - it has great information on solar power systems.
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