fiatphoney
New Member
Jonesy said:Bit too much Russ Hinze-like for me.
When I was at Uni their was the Russ Hinze (beer gut drinking) appreciation society. Compulsory student union fees at 'work'.
Jonesy said:Bit too much Russ Hinze-like for me.
Big A.D. said:jparrie said:Can someone help me with the maths?
If I rig up a bank of really bright lights over my 2Kw solar system overnight and pay the current off peak rate of 11c/Kwh, then sell the electricity produced back to the grid at my current 66c/Kwh, will I make a profit? Would it work?
I'm serious!
What you're looking for is an "arbitrage controller unit".
It will automatically buy electricity when it's cheap, dump it into a battery array and then drain the batteries to sell the energy back into the grid when the price is higher. You can either program it manually or plug it into the smart meter and it will monitor all the data (including feed-in tariffs) and just do the buy and sell trades by itself.
Google "RAPS" and "remote area power systems" for a better idea about what is involved in storing energy and moving it around.
Dogmatix said:Scientists need funding. They're not all agenda-free.
Besides, the good scientists get to work with the big $$ companies, and the others have to settle for the scraps, right?![]()
Scientists are certainly not free from all the vices that make us human. Not greed and not wilful ignorance either.
jparrie said:I was wondering whether anyone here knows anything about how solar panels work before I tried it. i.e, would lights give enough light to actually produce any electricity at all?
jparrie said:Interesting Big A.D., however the problem with that is first the cost of the batteries and then the fact that I can't add any further supply on top of my current solar panels output without getting fined a zillion dollars. However, I haven't read anywhere that I can't supply artificial sunlight to my panels at night and increase their output that way.
I was wondering whether anyone here knows anything about how solar panels work before I tried it. i.e, would lights give enough light to actually produce any electricity at all?
Jonesy said:I am not talking about the absolute state of the economy, I am talking about how governments run the economies that they are given. The current government has not run it's economy with any competence.
Big A.D. said:Agauholic said:Big A.D. said:Taking a swipe at the CSIRO is really not cool.
Bulldust, call out statist punks for what they are.
You do know what the CSIRO is, right?
They're scientists and they're going to get taxpayer dollars for studying stuff regardless of what the data actually tells them. They don't have an agenda because they don't need one. It's one of the great aspects of publicly funded research.
And before you start going on about your tax dollars being wasted on useless research, the CSIRO actually makes an overall profit for the Australian taxpayer by spinning-off the results of their research and having it commercialised.
And before you start going on about your tax dollars
fishball said:I'd rather my tax dollars fund the CSIRO than pay for some stupid war or a politician's pension/salary.
Big A.D. said:What's the deal with your "maximum allowed solar output"?
33% ROI for my system, just a way of voting some of my tax back into my pocket.jparrie said:Big A.D. said:What's the deal with your "maximum allowed solar output"?
Yeah, badly worded, I'll try again... I am not allowed to add to the output by adding solar panels. I can only use the existing panels. There's no way I would be allowed to buy cheap power then sell it back to the grid at my current 60c.
Oh well never mind. Mine will be paid off this year with the savings. Haven't had a power bill since they were put in.
Its funny how people think I'm a greenie because I bought solar panels. There's always a puzzled look on their faces when I tell them it was the only logical financial decision to make given the pay back period.
Finally, the tax payer feeds me for a change!
jparrie said:Big A.D. said:What's the deal with your "maximum allowed solar output"?
Yeah, badly worded, I'll try again... I am not allowed to add to the output by adding solar panels. I can only use the existing panels. There's no way I would be allowed to buy cheap power then sell it back to the grid at my current 60c.
Oh well never mind. Mine will be paid off this year with the savings. Haven't had a power bill since they were put in.
Its funny how people think I'm a greenie because I bought solar panels. There's always a puzzled look on their faces when I tell them it was the only logical financial decision to make given the pay back period.
Finally, the tax payer feeds me for a change!
thatguy said:33% ROI for my system, just a way of voting some of my tax back into my pocket.jparrie said:Big A.D. said:What's the deal with your "maximum allowed solar output"?
Yeah, badly worded, I'll try again... I am not allowed to add to the output by adding solar panels. I can only use the existing panels. There's no way I would be allowed to buy cheap power then sell it back to the grid at my current 60c.
Oh well never mind. Mine will be paid off this year with the savings. Haven't had a power bill since they were put in.
Its funny how people think I'm a greenie because I bought solar panels. There's always a puzzled look on their faces when I tell them it was the only logical financial decision to make given the pay back period.
Finally, the tax payer feeds me for a change!
fishball said:I'd rather my tax dollars fund the CSIRO than pay for some stupid war or a politician's pension/salary.
jparrie said:Big A.D. said:What's the deal with your "maximum allowed solar output"?
Yeah, badly worded, I'll try again... I am not allowed to add to the output by adding solar panels. I can only use the existing panels. There's no way I would be allowed to buy cheap power then sell it back to the grid at my current 60c.
Big A.D. said:jparrie said:Big A.D. said:What's the deal with your "maximum allowed solar output"?
Yeah, badly worded, I'll try again... I am not allowed to add to the output by adding solar panels. I can only use the existing panels. There's no way I would be allowed to buy cheap power then sell it back to the grid at my current 60c.
Does your agreement say you can't add additional solar panels and sell the additional output or does it just say you can't sell additional output full stop?
There is a big difference.
PradoEagle said:Big A.D. said:jparrie said:Yeah, badly worded, I'll try again... I am not allowed to add to the output by adding solar panels. I can only use the existing panels. There's no way I would be allowed to buy cheap power then sell it back to the grid at my current 60c.
Does your agreement say you can't add additional solar panels and sell the additional output or does it just say you can't sell additional output full stop?
There is a big difference.
My agreement (Perth) says that you can't exceed the original size. For me that means that you can't exceed your original inverter rating. If you had a larger inverter put in at the start then you can add panels untill you inverter to maxed out. My inverter is maxed out. If you add panels then you drop back to the current buy in rate, which for Perth is 7 cents. I currently get 47 cents for each kwh exported.
PE