We are building a new home with ADU - about 4000 sq ft.
Looking to add solar after the final inspection by the city. We are thinking of one panel with two meter slots. One for main house and other for ADU.
We are looking to add a battery as a backup from those days when there is no power (1-2 days in a year). Leaning towards 13Kwh battery that can power fridge and some lights for 1-2 days. We do not plan to use heavy appliances or EV charging for those days.
Few questions.
1. What can we do now, to make it solar-ready?
2. How many solar panels should we get? Are 10-12 panels (each generating about 400-450W) good enough to charge the battery?
Any other suggestions that you might have for us?
Thanks,
In addition to the other suggestions in this thread, you should consider:
- Have a rough PV and storage design completed as early in the house design/construction as possible
- Allocate space for the inverter and battery storage into the design plans for the home.
- Think through the interconnection point. Do you want whole house backup? Or only critical circuits. If a transfer switch is needed, allocate space and note conductor paths.
- If ATS or a disconnect will be installed on the outside of the house, install a strong, attractive, weather proofed mounting surface to accomodate the mounting, rather than mounting to siding.
- The amount of PV you need will depend on your usage, and your solar installer should model the output based on the space avaialble and the array orientation, etc, ahead of time. You will need to estimate your usage, but maybe your HVAC contractor can help, or you can estimate based on similar construction home with similar HVAC and appliances. I would think much more than 10-12 400W panels are needed for your 4000 sq ft home, especially with EV charging. Probably more like 10kW.
- Install 1-inch EMT conduit run from the inverter location up through interior walls into attic for the PV output conductors from the array.
- Plan the locations of any roof penetrations needed for the PV circuits from the array on roof into attic. Try and locate them somewhat near the attic access hatch, and install walk boards from the hatch to the penetration locations at/above any blown in insulation level if the attic will be insulated before the penetrations can be completed, so the insulation will not be compressed during the install.
- Install permanent roof ridge anchors under the ridge cap while the roof is shingled, your installer will appreciate and will eliminate a chance for leaks.