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this post was submitted on 18 Jul 2026
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I got the power station first out of necessity, but am now at the point of desperately trying to justify adding solar panels even though I don't camp or anything. I fear it could become obsessive though.
Maybe I keep can limit myself to only as many panels as I own violins? That would be a fair number… Or at least cap it off at the number of musical instruments in the house? That would leave some room to grow, if I can count my wife's ukulele collection!
Lol, def can become an obsession. First hand experience there.
I've wanted a whole house PV system for a long time, and this is just me finally getting around to making it happen. SO and I were talking about getting a backup generator installed, but that would have been about $7,000 for something that would only get used two or three times a year since our power doesn't go out often (we have no heat or ability to cook when the power goes out, and it's always in the dead of winter when we lose power). The PV system I sketched out was about $9.000, but in addition to covering us during outages, we could use it daily to reduce electric bill so, unlike the generator, this would pay for itself over time.
SO finally came around to my way of thinking, so here we are lol. My limiting factor is usable roof area. Of the roof that's south facing, only about 14x20 feet of it is suitable for mounting panels. There's a west-facing gable, but it's blocked most of the time by a tree. The east-facing side of the gable is available, but it's pretty much always foggy in the mornings here, so it wouldn't add much to the system.
Unless I build a ground mount setup in the back yard, we're pretty much at the limit of how many panels I can buy. I'm kind of glad for that because otherwise I'd just keep buying them.
I keep thinking about this. I can't justify solar when I live in a northern country and pay about $0.06 USD/kWh, but the value of resilience also counts.
😭 The per-kilowatt hour rider fees on top of my base rate per kWh are way more than that lol.
Im "lucky" enough to live in a region with abundant hydroelectric power. It's still cheaper to heat your home with natural gas here...air source heat pumps might get close when they work.