A year with Solar - My Stats
Well, it's now been right at a year with my Solar and Battery Backup system. Some interesting stats. It's producing about as expected, but not as much as I hoped. My vendor (Enphase) added some useful charting info called "Solar Offset" to their web interface. I know I asked for this several times and I'm sure others did too. It now provides a chart of the solar vs. grid power used so that it's easy to see how much of a percentage your Solar farm is producing compared to grid utilization. This was not previously calculated accurately by them as you can see from the other chart labeled "Energy Independence". I love this new Solar Offset chart addition, and kudo's to the Enphase team for adding it.
I decided to go back and get the stats for the last 12 months to see how it is performing in the various months here in Mid Florida. Here is the Link to the original install post last year with better drone pics.was so worth it last year when the neighborhood without power for 4-5 days.
Let's start with overall stats for the entire past year.
This shows that our overall Solar production for the past year offset our grid power bill by 62% for the year. We produced 17.5 Mwh and Consumed 28.2 Mwh. Yes, we are high consumption users. Keep in mind that we not only run the AC a lot for health issues, but we also both work from home that includes cooling our 3 car garage space that is taken up by my partner's large quilting machine and embroidery machine (that also adds to the power drain). And I also charge my Chevy Blazer EV which accounts for at least a third of the electric bill depending on driving. One day I may figure how to separate the two costs.
The way my panels are situated on the roof, they don't get into full production until about noon. They get some partial power starting at 8am. My goal would be to add another 8 to 12 panels that can catch more morning sun to extend the production hours and also increase the production to fully offset the grid usage and keep feeding back to the grid. We are able to do that already a few months of the year, as you'll see in the details, but I'd like to extend that more.
Basics of system are I have 32 panels, 4 battery backup units, the main gateway controller and brain of the system, and individual microinverters on each panel/battery. The system is super smart, able to switch from grid to battery in a microsecond without us even noticing the outage in the several small outages we've had around 10-15 minutes. We get about 3 days/nights of usage off the batteries in the event of an extended outage if we're not using the Air Conditioning (see previous post here), and basically unlimited if we get at least some partial sun on those days to recharge the batteries and run the house.
Here are the 32 Panels, facing mostly west due to roof position. I would like to add 12 more to the other side(s) to pull in more morning power and increase overall power.
Here is the 4 batteries on the bottom, the smart controllers above.
A closer view of the Enphase 5P battery.
Here you can see the power connection. The grid power comes from the ground (buried) then into the meter. It then goes into a breaker box, then to the smart controller. The power then comes out of the smart controller and feeds back into the main house breaker box from the conduit you see at the top feeding back into the house. This way our entire house is on the Solar/Battery controller and all plugs and devices are able to be used. We then control power usage ourselves by turning things on or off. This has a slight drawback of possibly using excess power if away and grid is lost, but even with the AC and everything else running, we'll still get a full night and maybe a full day of power, much more if we turn off the high energy devices.
Tech Details of the system:
System Size = 13.44 kW DC
Panels = QTron M-G2+420 (32 Panels, 420 Watts each)
Micro Inverters = IQ8M-72-2 (240V)
AC rated power output = 10.56 kWh AC
Estimated First Year Production
17,914 kWh
Battery Backup = Enphase 20.16 kWh system (4 IQ Battery 5P)
Battery capacity = 20.2 kWh (5 kWh each)
Operating power = 7.68 kW
Monthly Breakdown of Solar Offset:
July 2024 - 56% Offset - 1.1 MWh produced, 1.9 MWh Consumed. (half month installed on 7/12).
August 2024 - 52% Offset - 1.6 MWh produced, 3.1 MWh Consumed.
September 2024 - 46% Offset - 1.2 MWh produced, 2.7 MWh consumed.
October 2024 - 63% Offset - 1.3 MWh produced, 2.0 MWh consumed.
November 2024 - 59% Offset - 1.1 MWh produced, 1.8 MWh consumed.
December 2024 - 51% Offset - 883.7 kWh produced, 1.7 MWh consumed.
January 2025 - 32% Offset - 1.0 MWh produced, 3.2 MWh consumed.
February 2025 - 83% Offset - 1.1 MWh produced, 1.3 MWh consumed.
March 2025 - 129% Offset - 1.7 MWh produced, 1.3 MWh consumed.
April 2025 - 109% Offset - 2.1 MWh produced, 1.9 MWh consumed.
May 2025 - 72% Offset - 1.8 MWh produced, 2.5 MWh consumed.
June 2025 - 60% Offset - 1.7 MWh produced, 2.9 MWh consumed.
July 2025 - 54% Offset - 1.0 MWh produced, 1.9 MWh consumed (partial month 20 days)
Keep in mind that our primary motivation for Solar was to provide power backup during the frequent outages and hurricanes we have here. On that front, we are extremely happy with the system. It has been fantastic to go thru these small outages without even notice (unless I look at the logs and alerts), and was so worth it last year when the neighborhood without power for 4-5 days.
Our payments are about $230 per month, and according to the stats, it saved us about $219 per month on our elec bill. Yes, some months our normal bill would be less, but also sometimes our monthly bill was over $500, so it's almost paying for itself. I think adding the 12 panels would put us over the top, but need some additional capital funds to work with first. Adding panels is a fraction of the initial install cost though, but prefer to wait and pay cash so they can immediately start adding value rather than another payment.
Other cool charts: Keep in mind that our cold months are Jan-Feb and our Hottest months are July-Aug. Our home is (almost) all-electric except for the Pool Heater which is propane (but electric pump). We actually over-produced 2 months March-April and got some credits on our bill the month following. Was so nice to have a $0 electric bill for that month, now if I can multiply that by 6 or 8 would be ideal!
Produced vs. Consumed Chart
Solar Offset Chart:
Electric Bill Chart:
Table of Solar data:
Now before you freak out and judge me over what you may think are high electric bills, remember that I also drive a Blazer EV. So ALL my driving costs are also included and we had a lot of driving back and forth to Mayo clinic every week last year. About $500-$1000 of the $2,300 total annual electric bill was from charging the SUV.
I like this so much better than the propane generator backups we had in the past. Those would always cause internet disruption during the powerup/powerdown transitions, were obnoxiously noisy, and of course did not provide any money back for the investment other than the convenience of having power during outage. All the maintenance and fuel costs were just another addition.
Such a cool project. That is so awesome to see how that has paid off for you!
Yes thanks. I'm looking forward even more to when is all expanded and fully paid for to start really seeing those savings. I can only imagine how much more electricity costs are going to rise over the next 5-10 years, making it even more valuable investment then.
For now, we are just tickled to be prepared for this round of storms and (non) outages!
Such a neat investment! I always wondered what it would cost on the capital investment side vs operational return and maintenance costs. How long would it take to pay for itself.
So awesome to be able to track all of the stats and work on efficiencies. With the additional motivation to power the EV and stabilize power availability in a region of frequent outages, seems a no brainer.
Cool to follow and consider!
Today seems to be my day for catching names from the past in my feed! I must have just missed the timing on your posts! Great to see you again!
Yes, I remember the name. I'm surprised we haven't crossed more often as well. I'm following you now too so we should see more. I don't post much more than maybe once a week, so easy to miss, lol.
I actually just started following this group about this time last year. Paying more attention to them for sure, because I love comparing the technology.
You must cross paths with @solominer in that circle. I love watching his stats and findings from a solar array on his homestead.
Yes, I've been comparing his a lot. We used to be about the same size, but super envious of his building out his new array. I love the way he's been able to do much more self-build than I was. I do really like the way the Enphase packages all together and their nice web and app portal for pulling the detailed stats and monitoring. I've found their realtime app very useful in determining how much power an individual appliance is using. It's cool to turn something on or off and see the power consumption change 2 seconds later. Has been great to identify the power hogs (pool pump), and adjust their usage to keep in line with the solar production.
Wow, that is impressive! It makes me pretty happy that my electric and gas bill is generally right around $150 per month. Even then I think it is too high! I would probably be serious looking into something like this if it were much higher.
Yes, I had hoped to have more data on the vehicle Elec consumption, but the Autel app has a bug keeping me from the data right now and I couldn't pull it from the charger system. It's definitely not a short term gain, more long term investment, but loving the backup power availability.
It sounds pretty amazing. Perhaps in my next home I can have something like this.
Considering your high energy usage is fair enough result, if you had a gasoline car and not that much use for AC etc, you would probably be even or even producing more than used, so I'd say it's a good result
Yes, I was hoping to add detail on the vehicle's consumption, but the Autel car charger apparently lost it's brain this week and I can't get to the history. Still trying to work that out. If I get it back, will upload the diffs.
I'm definitely pleased with how the system is working and just love the way the battery backup works flawlessly without interrupting like the propane generator did.
That's pretty awesome! Florida is the sunshine state, after all. Might as well take advantage of it. You mentioned mid Florida, so maybe that's not somewhere that is likely to take damage from hurricanes. That's the one thing I'd worry about down there. I hear if they get damaged, it can get expensive. I live much, much further north where I'd actually worry about ice and snow and stuff.
Either way, thanks for sharing! A lot of people are interested in solar and things like that, but they're unsure about how it would work out. You've given a great example of how it works!
They are pretty solid. Warranty for like 20 years or so on most components. The nice thing about a microinverter design is that even if a few panels are damaged, the rest keep working.
Oh, that's cool! Yeah, you should be good to go for a long time, then!
Congrats on your first year with solar. Stats looking good!
That's a cool system and it's doing the job of saving you money and dealing with outages. Our usage is different as we have no A/C, but we do charge up the EV now and then. We are still saving a lot over before the panels and we didn't have the EV then. I would think that in places like Florida it ought to be standard to have solar. You will get a lot more sun than us and you will use more power.
Shine on!
Yes, the backup batteries were by far the most expensive part of our system. Way over half the cost, I'm sure. I know several folks with just the panels for savings and "normal" use that do great.
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