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by jacquesm
864 days ago
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I'm curious about how well this performs in winter when the sun is low in the sky and you have a pretty big deficiency. Usually you use what ever angle the roof is at (typically 30 - 45 degrees) and leave it at that. By adding a vertical component you may be able to substantially offset the summer/winter difference. Vertical panels won't do much in the summer but that's fine, you'll have a surplus anyway. But in winter you need every little bit. But from a ROI point of view those would be pretty expensive KWh, because the total produced versus the capital expense won't be very high. And in plenty of places the local authorities might have something to say about covering the outside of the building with panels. I'm going to play around with this here to see what it does. |
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