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Originally Posted by redpoint5
I still might go solar here, but I'll be sourcing all of the stuff and installing it myself for the learning opportunity. I'm actually leaning more towards wind though. I did the math on a micro-hydro system at my parents and it wouldn't work out well. I can generate about 65 watts continuous, or about $57 in electricity per year.
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I’ll do the same. I started small by adding PV to my shed by taking apart a solar floodlight I bought for $30 and repurposing the parts. 2 months ago stepped it up a notch and added a 200W of PV to my campervan. The campervan system uses all the same components and connectors as a home system and the installation is really easy. My home solar quotes averaged about $7K for labor to do the installation. I asked the rep how long it would take and he said the install would take 6-8 hours. That is quite the hourly rate! I’ll pay an electrician to connect the box but that is about it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by redpoint5
I'm looking at buying a house in Silverton, but the market is at all time highs despite an interest rate that has been moving up. My plan is to always keep the houses I buy and rent them out.
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That is a nice area. We were down that way 2 weeks ago to try out the Benedictine Brewery and Taproom that just opened. The market will drop in the next recession when people can’t roll over their ARMs anymore. That is why my wife and I are saving not buying. As of today we are officially in a market correction….
Quote:
Originally Posted by redpoint5
... I read an interesting article about the advantage of not putting 20% down on a house to avoid PMI. It basically gave the opportunity cost argument.
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I’m very familiar with the argument. It is all about using other people’s money to maximize return. Personally I like to use my own money, avoid debt, and minimize risk.
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Originally Posted by thingstodo
Which one is net metering?
- All your generated electricity goes to the grid at 1.6 cents per kw-h and you buy it back at 12 cents per kw-h
- You use the grid as a big battery, pump in your excess kw-h and they keep track. You take them back out at night and when you exceed the 'battery' value you pay the difference
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Those are both examples of net metering. One at a horrible exchange rate and one at a fair rate. Net metering laws vary from state to state. For example:
In Oregon retail customers with flat rating billing get one-for-one credit / debit. You can bank extra credits month over month but in March it zeros out and any unused credits go to Oregon’s low income electricity fund.
Prior it my move to Oregon I lived in Alabama for 7 years. Alabama has no net metering laws so the utility pays you nothing for extra electricity produced and feed into their grid. The meter only goes one way.