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Comment by cornstalks

3 days ago

There are way cheaper options than the Anker Solix 3800. Here are some options, in no particular order:

- $3,300: 10 kWh with 2x EG4 WallMount Indoor 100Ah.

- $3,110: 14 kWh with 1x WallMount Indoor 280Ah.

- $2,690: 10 kWh with 1x Deye RW F10.2 B

- Will Prowse's YouTube channel has reviewed several battery builds that are >10 kWh and near $2,000, but they're DIY assembly.

Batteryhookup has batteries for $40/kWh :) just put together a off grid setup for a friend and 8kwh cost $400 in parts!

  • I'll check that out. The goal is to get to something that runs all night (or almost all night) with around 1kwh output using as little space as possible. I've just started poking around, but this'll help.

    In the third world there's plenty of sunlight, but you don't need the power during the day necessarily. That price'll get to $400 for storage, $400 for panels, which is ballpark.

And still much more than the cost of the solar panels, which was GP's point.

  • GP only has two panels that generate 960 W (I’m going to generously assume NMOT and not STC). That’s hardly anything, and certainly not what I would use to try and charge 10 kWh of battery like they’re suggesting.

    But sure, I agree it would help if battery prices came down.

    • During the day when nobody's home the panels are charging the battery.

      Obviously more panels are better.

      The goal is to be able to run a small window AC unit and various small appliances at night. That's a tremendous quality-of-life upgrade for a huge number of people. $1000 USD would make it somewhat affordable, in the window for a viable small business/NGO opportunity. There's obviously a whole lot more (installation, labor, maintenance, etc), but material cost needs to be low for it to work.