popular Posted by Skillful_Pickle | Staff • 3d ago
May 21, 2025 3:56 PM
Item 1 of 2
Item 1 of 2
popular Posted by Skillful_Pickle | Staff • 3d ago
May 21, 2025 3:56 PM
ECO-WORTHY 7380W Solar Kit (18 Panels, 12000W MPPT Inverter, 4*48V 100Ah LP Battery) $7500 + Free Shipping
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$8,500
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Caleo
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank korg
The solar inverter that they include has AC grid input which can switch to grid input bypass when batteries are depleted. It can also charge the batteries via AC. You can check the eco-worthy website to find the manual for the inverter.
https://legalclarity.or
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Was doing research yesterday (Google Gemini is quite helpful in laying out basics and elaborating on follow up questions without being too biased towards the Google Solar thing) and when I was trying to get an accurate rate for buy back (I'm in Indiana and AEP serves both Michigan and Indiana and is the only electric option in my city) and after beating around the bush to not answer anything exact, the answer I got was that it's not always same rate as they sell it to you for but 18c/KwH I believe was what it said was current metered buy-back rate. You would think, however, that if energy is energy then they should pay you the same amount they charge you. Considering all the "rider"charges itemized on the bill adding up to sometimes 30% of my entire bill, being described as costs of eco this and eco that and energy saving plant bla bla...One of the only types of companies that can sell you a product or service while also simultaneously charging you to store the service on their property, reimburse all services and maintenance the company spends on aquiring, transporting etc etc....
Thats like buying a vending machine on a monthly payment plan to be able to go downstairs and choose snacks out of it, to be billed triple their cost plus charges to power it, maintenance when it breaks etc. Ok, analogies not my string suite.
Google Gemini helped me out a lot with all my questions about this. They have a site you can plug in your address to get estimates of how much power your location will generate per day etc. And they won't spam you like all the other Solar companies requiring info for an estimate. Write down the questions you have, ask Google AI one by one. You can break the answers down further to clarify /elaborate/obtain some links for resources , supplies etc. I created a useful little rough draft I just emailed to self and printed to take with me to Harbor freight and some other stores that sell panels and individual components of such a setup. Amazon was best for wiring, adapters etc...
Excellent information, thanks.