ning
Elite Member
I sized mine for growth, understanding that with free/cheaper power (especially during the day), I'm more likely to keep the house cooler than previously - we've often made do with windows & doors open when "it's not THAT hot!" and last summer we actually closed the house and went for AC at much more reasonable temperatures...I recall being told that before you consider solar - in order to have it correctly sized and not oversized for your usage - you should first do everything else to reduce your energy usage. This is because they (at least in my case) sized the solar set up based on the last twelve months of energy usage. I suppose they mean put in LED bulbs, clean filters, maybe switch out energy efficient appliances, and more. We had already done most of that - and we were not about to buy a new refrigerator or spend too much that way. So far, it seems the sizing was correct - we did have a $151 Tru-Up bill at the last anniversary of our installation - but our daughter and SIL are living with us while they build a home here - and were not here for that twelve-month billing stint which they used to size the solar installation. They live in a separate building so more AC, lights and such. Very happy we went solar - as mentioned before here - saving about $4,000 a year and likely more now that rates have increased.
You should also tell them if you are contemplating adding something that will use a lot of electricity - pool, hot tub, AC - so they can figure that in as well.
IMO it's cheaper to overbuild a bit today rather than try to make it a bit bigger later - it's a money-losing proposition to upgrade the solar panels after 5-10 years vs choosing slightly bigger ones today.
That said, I did also set up my system so that I can easily add another array 50% the size of the current one by making sure the wiring is sized for that (kinda part of the overbuild; spent an extra couple hundred on going up two sizes in wire to the ground mount) - in case / for when we add an electric car like my wife's been threatening (the system uses edge inverters, so there's no inverter to upgrade, and the main system switch is capable of handling the increased current with a breaker change, and there was no smaller capability switch available for this system).