S
shanklin
I am in the process of getting quotes for a PV system of up to 4kW for a house located 35 miles SW of London, and have been looking at various manufacturer's claims w.r.t. performance. The primary data that I seeing presented are:
Panel efficiency is clearly relevant in that, the greater the panel efficiency, the smaller the panel's area and weight for a given maximum output power. As stated on a number of discussion threads here, this is helpful if there are weight or space limitations with the roof on which the panels will be installed.
However, this apart, I am not too concerned about panel efficiency. What I am, however, very interested in is the average annual energy output (kWh) per panel and, based on the quotes I get, the cost of each kWh of average annual energy output per pound spent.
Sanyo claim to be (one of?) the best in terms of achieving better power output, compared with their maximum rated output, in different light and temperature conditions. This will presumably help in terms of annual energy output.
So, whilst they are more expensive than other panels I have quotes for, given space/weight considerations I am considering going with an array of their HIT panels.
This unfortunately feels like a bit of a punt of my part as despite massive googling over the last few days, I cannot find any source of data that objectively compares panels in terms of their average annual energy output in a given situation, say south-facing with a given roof pitch at a given location in the UK.
All the focus in instead on efficiency. This seems to me like comparing football teams in terms of what proportion of the chances they create they actually score from (Team A: 20%, Team B: 25%) and ignoring the fact that Team A create 3 times as many chances as Team B.
Anyway, in a practical sense, I would be grateful for any advice people can provide. Many thanks
- maximum panel output
- panel efficiency, albeit no satisfactory definition of this is really provided in what I've read
Panel efficiency is clearly relevant in that, the greater the panel efficiency, the smaller the panel's area and weight for a given maximum output power. As stated on a number of discussion threads here, this is helpful if there are weight or space limitations with the roof on which the panels will be installed.
However, this apart, I am not too concerned about panel efficiency. What I am, however, very interested in is the average annual energy output (kWh) per panel and, based on the quotes I get, the cost of each kWh of average annual energy output per pound spent.
Sanyo claim to be (one of?) the best in terms of achieving better power output, compared with their maximum rated output, in different light and temperature conditions. This will presumably help in terms of annual energy output.
So, whilst they are more expensive than other panels I have quotes for, given space/weight considerations I am considering going with an array of their HIT panels.
This unfortunately feels like a bit of a punt of my part as despite massive googling over the last few days, I cannot find any source of data that objectively compares panels in terms of their average annual energy output in a given situation, say south-facing with a given roof pitch at a given location in the UK.
All the focus in instead on efficiency. This seems to me like comparing football teams in terms of what proportion of the chances they create they actually score from (Team A: 20%, Team B: 25%) and ignoring the fact that Team A create 3 times as many chances as Team B.
Anyway, in a practical sense, I would be grateful for any advice people can provide. Many thanks