RegGuheert said:
That's a good deal! OTOH, it appears they charge $2/watt for Enphase M215 microinverters. (Or perhaps Enphase only allows them to show retail pricing?)
Their web site is very confusing when it comes to pricing. What's shown under "shop by inverter" are ridiculous prices.
This page below shows more reasonable prices :
http://king-solarman.com/power-inverters/enphase-energy-inverters.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
This shows $138 for M215 which is 64 cents a watt.
I didn't buy my micro-inverters from King Solarman. I bought them from another company called Westinghouse solar in San Jose. They have some surplus M190s for $99 a piece which is 52 cents/watt.
The M215 are costly to install because you need trunk cables for each one which adds another $30 per inverter. The older M190s that I went with have built-in 6ft cables, so no extra cost.
Of course, the M215 can produce more. However, the M190s are fine with the 240W panels I ended up getting. The peak production per panel is about 175W for each, which is still less than the max the M190 can do. The M215 may make sense for bigger panels in the 250-290W range.
My system addition was completed yesterday. Here is the public site.
https://enlighten.enphaseenergy.com/public/systems/njM38932" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The big array at the bottom is made up of 28 Sharp NU-U235F1 235W mono panels with 14 D380 micro-inverters. Those were installed 2 years ago.
The two smaller arrays at the top, of 3 and 9 panels, are with the new cheaper Talesun 240W poly panels, with 12 M190s.
The D380s are like two M190s in one unit, so essentially all the micro-inverters are the same generation technology.
The new panels have only been running for day, but if you looks like the new panels are producing about 10 to 20% more energy than the old ones. The old panels may need to be cleaned, something I have never done.
The new panels are mounted 8" away from the roof, while the old ones are flush with the roof. According to my installer the spacing means the panels run cooler and produce more.
I think I got quite a deal on the solar expansion, at about $2/W net.
I still have roof space and would have put a few more panels at this price, except you can only have a max of 32 amps of generation with a 200amp main electrical panel. Upgrading to a 400amp panel was cost prohibitive, almost $4000 extra ! Maybe some day, but not now.
Now I just need to get a deal on a Leaf to start benefiting from all this extra power...
Even with 40 solar panels, I won't have any surplus energy if I never get a Leaf. But I will be paying only meter charges due to the TOU rate.
If I add the Leaf, I could charge it at home up to about 5.5 kWh per day without extra cost on the bill, thanks to the TOU rate.