• Zip2@feddit.uk
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    2 minutes ago

    My dumb ass: “Is it just 1.5m Germans, or other heights too?”

  • Valmond@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    This is really nice! This is the future!

    I’d love to know how much they produce, especially during the winter/monthly.

    • Atelopus-zeteki@fedia.io
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      2 hours ago

      In the Northern hemisphere, in Winter the Sun is at a low angle, so vertically oriented panels might produce more. As an example, I have a sunroom and at Winter’s Solstice the sunlight reaches about 3-4 meters into the room. At Summer’s Solstice there is no direct sunlight in the room, as the Sun is overhead.

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    “Plug-in solar is part of the whole array of options,”

    I don’t understand how this works? For our system we need an inverter that cost about $3000.- (half if it doesn’t have to handle a battery), and it needs to be installed by an authorized electrician.
    For a small system as the one shown, the price of panels are peanuts, the 2 panels shown should cost less than $150 combined. While the cost of inverter and getting it connected is way way higher. There’s a lot more to this than not being on the roof!?! But which isn’t disclosed.

    The article says nothing about how the power from those panels is made usable.

    • Hugin@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      There are two main inverter approaches. One big inverter that takes the DC from a bunch of panels and converts it into AC and micro inverters where each panel gets it’s own small one placed directly under the panel.

      The micro inverters cost around $150 each. So you need around 10 panels before the single inverter becomes a good choice.

      Installers love the micro because the install is easier. However as a owner with say 30 panels you now have 30 points of possible failure instead of the 1.

    • schnokobaer@feddit.org
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      7 hours ago

      The “balcony” bit isn’t the defining characteristic, it shouldn’t be taken literally. Some people do have their “balcony solar power” on their roofs.

      What defines it is limitation to 800 W and inverters that come with a normal Euro Type F (“Schuko”) plug and no legal requirement for professional installation. A layman can literally plug it in to an existing wall socket. Given that they are capped at 800 Watts, the inverters are also the simplest type and dirt cheap (although often they are literally just software-capped and identical to higher power ones, make of that what you will). Complete systems (2 panels, cabling, inverter) cost between 299€ and 800€ depending on quality. You genuinely only have to buy a fixture that suits your needs and a mate to help you install it.

      Proper several-Kilowatt-systems are very expensive in Germany too.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        Thanks really good info. 👍😀

        A layman can literally plug it in to an existing wall socket

        That’s amazing, I had no idea that is possible??? Is that special for Germany? (sorry for keeping on with new questions). 😋 I’ve never heard of that option here in Denmark.

        cost between 299€ and 800€

        No wonder it’s a popular option, our system is of course bigger with 11.2 kWh and 7.5 kWh battery. but it was $17000 1½ year ago. Prices have dropped to $12500 for a similar system, but still such an 800W system is dirt cheap by comparison.

        • Gerprimus@feddit.org
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          6 hours ago

          There are already a few requirements for operating the balcony panels, At least here in Germany:

          • You need a suitable electricity meter
          • You have to register with a relevant authority and inform the electricity provider that you are operating a “balcony power plant”.
          • The microconverter should run on its own secured circuit. (“Should”, will certainly do very few) But technically it is simple:
          1. Set up panels
          2. Connecting necessary plugs
          3. Microconverter to the socket
          4. Be happy that you produce up to 800 watts of your own electricity

          I think it’s almost irrelevant how many panels you ultimately split up. However, no more than 800 watts may be fed in.But if you have panels with, let’s say, 2000 watts, you can of course charge various batteries with them beforehand. Nobody can say anything against it.

          • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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            3 hours ago

            You need a suitable electricity meter

            That makes sense, we also needed new meter, and that was about €200.- with installation. Not a big deal for a big installation, but for a system that can cost only €300.- an extra 200.- would be pretty significant.

          • DacoTaco@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Just for your information : belgium is allowing the balcony solar panels this year, but they have put limits on which you can install. The power supplier needs to have approved the kit you install. This is just to prevent people from getting cheap crap from the internet.
            Other than that, same rules!

        • schnokobaer@feddit.org
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          2 hours ago

          I had no idea that is possible??? Is that special for Germany?

          I mean, the regulation seems to be, but there’s no fancy tech going on. I’m not an electrician but I think I can explain, as I have recently tried to understand myself. To understand why it’s possible it’s best to understand why the limit is at 800 W precisely.

          So German wall outlets usually have a 16 A fuse and the wiring in the walls is dimensioned to accommodate slightly higher current (I think they are 2.5mm² gauge allowing up to 20 A but don’t quote me on that particular part) for safety reasons. I suppose it would be the same or very similar in Denmark, or maybe most of Europe that uses 230V/50Hz AC.

          Now, normally, if you have dangerously powerful load that would melt your wires, let’s say 5 kW, and you plug it in to an outlet the fuse will just pop and you’re safe. If however you have a 2 kW PV system connected to a wall outlet nearby, it would theoretically be possible that your 5 kW load draws 13 A (3 kW) from the mains through the fuse and another 8.7 A (2 kW) from the PV system over the same wire in the wall that is only rated at 20 A but now carries 21.7 A. And the fuse would never pop at 13 A, making it a huge fire hazard. 800 W is basically just what will always comfortably fit into the safety margin of the wiring in German houses. All systems above 800 W need to be hardwired by professionals “behind” the fuse box so that every Amp from your PV goes through a typical 16 A fuse.

          still such an 800W system is dirt cheap by comparison

          Absolutely. I guess the low threshold for installation allows some kind of mass market economy of scale whereas systems like yours are homeowners’ luxury goods.

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      If you pay 3000€ for an inverter then that’s probably included installing and whatnot. You can get a cheap 50€ 4kW inverter on aliexpress, or an expensive 500€ 10kW one.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        No the price was not including installation, We have 11.2 kW panels and 7.5 kWh batteries. Installation was almost $5000.- !! That was probably mostly the 28 panels on the roof. But we had one installer handling everything, who was also responsible for the electrician.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        OK thanks, so they are indeed complete systems including inverter, so it can be connected to the grid.
        I suppose they’ve made some cheap low power inverters then, but the power still needs to have stable voltage an frequency and synchronization. So I wonder how cheap it’s possible to make?
        I also suppose it still needs an authorized electrician to connect it? Unless Germany has some fancy system that is prepared for “plug in” connection of a local power source.

        • kalleboo@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          In the EU, as long as it’s under 800W it can be plugged directly into an outlet in your home without any kind of installation, back-feeding the grid that way.

          You’re not getting paid anything for the power you send back into the grid so anything you don’t use you lose.

          • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            Still very cool, because selling surplus power is almost completely worthless anyway. (at least it is here)
            In the summer when you can sell, prices are generally extremely low, we have sold about twice what we use, but the value of selling is only about 5-10% on average, compared to the savings of using it ourselves. That’s because the price often drop to close to zero in the middle of the day, and sometimes even below.
            Electricity itself is dirt cheap, the reason the prices are high are transportation and taxes, and short peak prices in the evening. Here transportation alone is more than the electricity itself during winter.
            And we are only paid the pure electricity price here, which I suppose is the case most places.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        For apartment buildings I don’t think that’s possible, since electricity is a per household connection with separate meter.

  • dahpu@feddit.org
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    10 hours ago

    For first few seconds, I deadass though they are talking about Germans with a height of 1,5 meters.

    • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      That was me.

      So why won’t taller Germans get solar? I don’t even see the connection to height… Oh, maybe they hit their heads on the panels? No, that doesn’t seem likely… I don’t get it.

  • Destide@feddit.uk
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    9 hours ago

    In b4 nimbys complain it’s an eyesore despite most people never looking up

  • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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    6 hours ago

    Would be nice if grid tied inverters weren’t such a regulatory PITA. Micro-deployment solar, and more importantly distributed energy storage, makes so much sense and could solve a lot of grid-related problems.

  • MudMan@fedia.io
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    10 hours ago

    I can tell you I have a portable solar battery for emergencies and if I need to use it the right place for the panel is in my balcony, so this makes a ton of sense. In an apartment building roof space is relatively small per unit, but at least where I am every unit has a balcony. In my case even a rear-facing balcony that doesn’t face the street but still gets sun for anywhere between 4-10 hours a day. If/when I am in a position to explore a solar installation this would be a good thing to look into.

  • seven_phone@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I am not sure 1.5m Germans all deciding on a single course of action is something to be happy about.

    • barsoap@lemm.ee
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      8 hours ago

      I blame Bavaria. If Germany had multiple price zones like other European countries instead of one giant one prices would plummet here in the north, while they’d explode in Bavaria. The state that does not want wind power, does want nuclear power, but already knows ahead of time that its geology (with lots of mountains and granite) is unsuitable for nuclear waste storage. Meanwhile, north German wind power and Scandinavian hydro dams complement each other perfectly. The Bavarians could do the same with the Austrians, they just don’t. They want to eat cake and have it, too.

      • SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org
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        50 minutes ago

        Am Bavarian can confirm. The CSU has been in power this state since forever. Especially old people just keep voting for them cause it’s the way it always was. They had to form a coalition after the last elections. Their partner is essentially the exact same party but even more right wing. Not even kidding, I could not name a single area where they differ other than their main guy apparently handed out nazi newspapers in his younger years or smth. He blamed it on his brother and then the scandal just died off.

    • Schorsch@feddit.org
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      8 hours ago

      nb4 someone laughs at us Germans for pulling out of nuclear power: No, nuclear is not cheap. It’s literally the most expensive way to generate electricity. Solar is cheap and better for the environment.

      • troed@fedia.io
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        7 hours ago

        Nuclear is cheaper than your average electricity cost.

        I know because I’m Swedish and you use us as your cheap electricity.

      • 0x0@programming.dev
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        7 hours ago

        No, nuclear is not cheap. It’s literally the most expensive way to generate electricity

        Source?

        Beats coal anytime. Or Russian gas.

      • Mihies@programming.dev
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        7 hours ago

        Nuclear is reliable, predictable and stable 24/7 source. Solar not so much and possibly not that great for the environment if we don’t figure out what to do with used solar panels. Also their production is not exactly clean. Whereas nuclear requires a wasted fuel storage somewhere and the fuel will eventually run out of radiation in some hundreds of thousands years.

    • muelltonne@feddit.org
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      7 hours ago

      Those small balcony systems pay for them here in Germany at ~35 Cents/kWh in a few months. Even if your power bill is 7x cheaper, they will pay for themselves easily.