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by bzbarsky
2449 days ago
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There is no legislation against it where I am (Massachusetts), and there is still very limited demand for it because of the pricing. > Most anybody would spend $500 extra on a 30k system for guaranteed power during blackouts. To be clear, to get "guaranteed power during blackouts" out of solar, you need both a more expensive inverter ($1k or so last I checked) and batteries ($5-15k last I checked). If you're OK power only when it's sunny _and_ a blackoutm you might be able to do just the more expensive inverter, maybe. I'm not actually sure whether that work without a battery sink for your unused current. |
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As to battery requirement, I can't see how attaching a wire to a panel would cause it to burn up. The wire would charge and then it would be the same thing as if the panel was disconnected with the same amount of latent charge in the panel.