Living off-grid sounds great, but it takes probably $100.000 or more to make it a reality and then an ongoing expense of batteries and other item that ware out and other items that the power company pays for when you are on-grid, that you now have to fix and replace immediately when they break, if you want your power back on. The power company has these in stock to get power back on right away, to do the same you should lay in a stock of spare parts. Or be prepared to spend weeks without power as you wait for parts or be ready to feed a generator for several weeks or more.
For most people it’s a dream more then a reality.
A Jacobs’s home wind generator system cost start at $50.000; add to that solar electric panels, solar water heaters, and solar air heaters. And control circuits, monitoring equipment, wiring (expensive in itself as it needs to handle lots of DC amperage) and a battery bank. And on top of all that you should be a jack-of-all-trades to install it and understand how it works and how diagnose a problem and then fix it. Plus I would imagine you need ins coverage for those spinning blades if they ever came off in a high wind and took out part of your neighbors house.
It all takes a lot of money.
Grid systems can start to look pretty good after you sit down and understand the commitment of time, money and knowledge needed to live off-grid.
A more practical (and realistic for most of us) is a backup power source for when the grid is down.
And maybe a supplemental solar / wind system to offset some of the grid power.
Edited by BobS (03/22/08 05:30 AM)
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