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Phenomenit | 2 years ago

I live in the edge of a row of townhouses and have a huge wall doing nothing but cooling the house. I’ve been thinking about having vertical panels on the wall and my fear is exactly what you described, that all RoI calculations are based on producing a lot of power during the summer half of the year and I that I will not recoup the money but the problem is that when it’s sunny outside everybody is producing electricity and the prices are low so I think the RoI don’t really take this in to account. My wall is on the sout side and gets sunlight all day, is much larger than my roof, doesn’t get covered with snow. The prices electricity are usually 10-20x higher during the winter and our consumption is also 10x higher. I don’t know it just seems to make more sense to put them on the wall.

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jacquesm|2 years ago

I think you should factor the savings on AC in the summer and heating in winter as well into your calculation. For that to be most efficient the air would need to be trapped behind the panel, I don't think you need to worry about overheating so much because they are going to be running at a low fraction of their theoretical capacity. There is a fair chance that including savings on heating and cooling it will actually work out but I haven't run the numbers in detail. But it certainly is an intriguing proposition, even if it would work only on South facing walls.

Phenomenit|2 years ago

We don’t have AC installed so our only major energy cost during the summer is hot water . Yeah it’s definitely worth doing som maths. One major pain point though is that we need a permit for vertical panels because it affects the look of the house.