I'm working up an estimate for a massive DIY solar grid-tie - understanding of course that the permitting process is a pain in the ass times twelve.
http://sunelec.com/Solar%20Systems.pdf
Using that as a source of estimation, two 7.6KW Inverters and 60 280W panels (basically 2/3 of the 25KW system), plus the pro rata share of the racking, optimizer, and quick-mounts comes to about $20,000-ish. Estimating a budget of 2000 for conduit, copper, and subpanels, plus a budget of 2000 for permitting/planning, does that sound about right? 24K-ish for a 16KWH DIY install? This is for a sort-of-high end duplex with optimal real estate for panels [no trees, perfect south facing 1:3 roof]. Would there be ways to save additional money?
Now, here's another factor, I'd prefer not to separate the 7.6KW Inverters as one per side - I'd rather combine them on the main and then essentially feed each side as a subpanel. Perhaps asking Xcel to reduce the system to a single meter (if they would let us...?) As the electrical usage of each side is *not* balanced, one side needs to "borrow" power from the other.
So... what am I f'ing up in my figuring here. Because it's going to be something. [ROFL1]
I'm very comfortable roofing and working with power, but I have yet to dig heavy into engineering any kind of solar system.
Side question: I've heard in the past that it's better to use a ton of microinverters so that down the road, bad panels in the array don't feck the overall generation. What's your general thoughts on that?