MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,098
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
What’s fuzzy about it?Moss, I respect you and I get what you are saying but that's fuzzy math. If you approach it that way it would be a 50 year payoff and no one would own one. With that approach you would be just as well off putting $20K in an interest bearing account and using it to pay your power bill until it runs out. Only difference is at the end of that time you will be back to paying a $200 to $300 power bill with no production. Look, I haven't decided to do this yet and my wife isn't crazy about the idea but I must say it is enticing to think of no power bill when I retire.
It’s based on a $150 average electric bill. You only get $50 per month to put towards paying off the system once you subtract the $100 minimum monthly charges from the electric company.
Let’s plug in a $250 average electric bill. Now you get $150 per month towards paying off the system ASSUMING that the system is the same size and cost as the previous example.
That’s what I’m trying to point out as to why you really have to run the numbers carefully To figure the actual amount you can put towards paying off the system each month, and hoping they don’t do away with net metering during that time period before it’s paid off.
- Figure the cost of the system sized to meet your current needs.
- Look at your average monthly electric bill for the past few years.
- Assume it’s going to go up a bit over the next few years (it always does).
- Take that figured monthly average bill
- Subtract the minimum fee that you’re going to have to pay to the electric company per month.
- The amount left over is the maximum you’re ever going to save per month (and assuming your solar will completely offset that fee each month) that you can put towards the cost of the system.
That’s best case most realistic scenario I can come up with.
And yes, you’re correct that putting money in an interest bearing investment would work. In fact, that’s what my wife and I have done over the past 42 years. We scrimped and saved and our investments now make more than our two incomes combined. They’ll pay the bills should we retire. That’s the end game. To have your money work for you should you survive long enough to see it. Isn’t that what most of us are trying to achieve?
