For More Information, Discount And Free Energy Audit 1-(888)-674-1112.

June 3, 2010

Sunforce 50044 60-Watt Solar Charging Kit

The Sunforce 50044 60-Watt Solar Charging Kit gives you another reason to love the sun — it’ll help keep your batteries charged. This kit is excellent for cabins, remote power, back-up power, and 12-volt battery charging. The kit includes a PVC mounting frame, 7 Amp charge controller, 200-watt inverter, and wiring/connection cables. And with the built-in blocking diode technology, this charger kit is designed to protect against battery discharge at night. You can also use this kit to maintain the charge on any 12-volt battery for clean, silent operation of various electronics, such as deer feeders and landscaping pumps. The 50044 features a built-in ultra-bright blue LED charging indicator, and is a great choice for automobiles, recreational vehicles (RV), tractors, all terrain vehicles (ATV), boats, electric fences, telemetry and more, and it is even effective on cloudy days. This battery charger kit is made of durable ABS plastic and amorphous solar cells and has a maximum temperature range of -40 to 176-degrees Fahrenheit.

The Sunforce 50044 60-Watt Solar Charging Kit has everything you need to start generating power. It includes four (4) 15-Watt amorphous solar panels with durable mounting frames, a 200-Watt modified sine wave power inverter, a 7-Amp solar charge controller, and a wiring kit with accessories for easy installation.

With built-in blocking diode technology, this solar charging kit is designed to protect against battery discharge at night. You can also use this kit to maintain the charge on any 12-Volt battery for clean, silent operation of various electronics, such as deer feeders and landscaping pumps. The included charge controller features a built-in ultra-bright blue LED charging indicator, and is a great choice for automobiles, recreational vehicles, tractors, all-terrain vehicles, boats, electric fences, telemetry and more.

November 13, 2009

How to Cook Using Free Energy?

Sun Oven / Solar Cooking Sun Oven / Solar Cooking – $ 249.00
You can bake, boil or steam without fuel. Bake at temperatures of 360° to 400° F with just the free energy of the sun. Prepare anything that can be baked in a conventional oven with no energy expense. Anywhere the sun shines, you can still enjoy a “home cooked meal”. Experience the superior taste and nutritional benefits of sun-baked foods.

At only 21 pounds in weight, and since you do not have to also lug along that bag of charcoal, the GLOBAL SUN OVEN® is a perfect addition to cooking in remote locations where you have to build open fires or bring a small grill. No fires to put out or ashes to extinguish.

And not just for warm climates either. The GLOBAL SUN OVEN® has been used very successfully at the base camp of a Mt. Everest expedition and in 126 countries around the world. Its not about the outdoor temperature that generate your free energy, its more about the brightness of the sun. A clear, low humidity 40 degree day will cook faster that a hot humid day.

And here in sunny Florida, why not make it a part of your hurricane preparedness kit? Long power outages are common and a sun oven is an ideal addition to helping you conserve what other energy resources you may have to use over extended time. Anyone who has experienced an Andrew or Katrina would really appreciate the ease and convenience of preparing a free energy cooked meal on a GLOBAL SUN OVEN®.

Video Courtesy of KSL.com

(more…)

November 12, 2009

$3.4B to Boost Smart Grid

Filed under: Florida Utilities — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 1:54 pm

By Adam C. Smith, Times Political Editor

Published Tuesday, October 27, 2009


ARCADIA — Standing in rural Florida amid 180 acres of solar panels, President Barack Obama on Tuesday announced $3.4 billion in federal stimulus grants to modernize America’s power grid and create jobs.

“At this moment, there’s something big happening in America when it comes to creating a clean-energy economy,” the president said while visiting the country’s largest solar plant — Florida Power & Light’s new DeSoto Next Generation Solar Energy Center southeast of Tampa. “But getting there will take a few more days like this one, and more projects like this one.”

Among the 100 projects receiving stimulus grants: $200 million for an FPL initiative to modernize its power grid, including transmission line improvements and more than 2 million “smart meters” that enable consumers to monitor and adjust their own power use and costs.

“Here in this region of Florida, this project will reduce demand for electricity by up to 20 percent during the hottest summer days that stress the grid and power plants,” Obama said. “It will provide smart meters to 2.6 million more customers. And most importantly, it will create thousands of jobs — good jobs, by the way, that can’t be outsourced; jobs that will last and jobs that pay a decent wage.”

North Carolina-based Progress Energy also received a $200 million grant. A spokeswoman said details were unavailable Tuesday, but that it would be divided evenly between projects in Florida and North Carolina.

The grants were awarded to 100 utilities and businesses that in turn will spend another $4.7 billion in private money on the so-called “smart grid.” The current grid system relies on century-old technology that the president said “wastes too much energy, it costs us too much money, and it’s too susceptible to outages and blackouts.”

Shirt sleeves rolled up, Obama arrived at the secluded Desoto County solar power farm by helicopter, after visiting the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville and raising money for Democrats in Miami on Monday. Before talking to invited guests, he wandered among the 90,000 solar panels with FPL chairman Lewis Hay, who was among several business leaders who had lunch with Obama at the White House earlier this month.

The vast fields of panels are tucked out of sight outside Arcadia, and utility officials said the $152 million facility generates enough power for about 3,000 homes. In reduced greenhouse gas emissions, the solar facility is estimated to be the equivalent of removing 4,500 cars from the roads every year.

Glowing praise from the president was a welcome change for FPL, which lately has been battered with negative publicity about its relationship with regulators and a request for a 30 percent rate increase.

“For the very first time, a large-scale solar power plant — the largest of its kind in the entire nation — will deliver electricity produced by the sun to the citizens of the Sunshine State. And I think it’s about time,” the president said.

Gov. Charlie Crist had made alternative energy and greenhouse gas reduction a top priority early in his tenure, but he steered clear of the president this week. Many conservatives are still fuming about Crist embracing Obama in Fort Myers in February and calling for the passage of the $787 billion stimulus package.

Times staff writer Ivan Penn contributed to this report. Adam C. Smith can be reached at asmith@sptimes.com.

September 22, 2009

Renovation Nation-Do Solar Panels Work on Cloudy Days?

How much sunlight do you really need?

See why Solar Energy even works during cloudy days.

If you would like to learn more on how to slash your electric bill and start saving money using homemade solar panels, click here to get  free information on our favorite solar panel instruction site.

September 15, 2009

Alternative Energy-Our Future On a Large Scale

If you would like to learn more on how to slash your electric bill and start saving money using homemade solar panels, click here to get  free information on our favorite solar panel instruction site.

September 7, 2009

Solar Panels Drop in Price

August 27, 2009
New York Times
By KATE GALBRAITH

When Greg Hare looked into putting solar panels on his ranch-style home in Magnolia, Tex., last year, he decided he could not afford it. “I had no idea solar was so expensive,” he recalled.

But the cost of solar panels has plunged lately, changing the economics for many homeowners. Mr. Hare ended up paying $77,000 for a large solar setup that he figures might have cost him $100,000 a year ago.

“I just thought, ‘Wow, this is an opportunity to do the most for the least,’ ” Mr. Hare said.

For solar shoppers these days, the price is right. Panel prices have fallen about 40 percent since the middle of last year, driven down partly by an increase in the supply of a crucial ingredient for panels, according to analysts at the investment bank Piper Jaffray.

The price drops — coupled with recently expanded federal incentives — could shrink the time it takes solar panels to pay for themselves to 16 years, from 22 years, in places with high electricity costs, according to Glenn Harris, chief executive of SunCentric, a solar consulting group. That calculation does not include state rebates, which can sometimes improve the economics considerably.

American consumers have the rest of the world to thank for the big solar price break.

Until recently, panel makers had been constrained by limited production of polysilicon, which goes into most types of panels. But more factories making the material have opened, as have more plants churning out the panels themselves — especially in China.

“A ton of production, mostly Chinese, has come online,” said Chris Whitman, the president of U.S. Solar Finance, which helps arrange bank financing for solar projects.

At the same time, once-roaring global demand for solar panels has slowed, particularly in Europe, the largest solar market, where photovoltaic installations are forecast to fall by 26 percent this year compared with 2008, according to Emerging Energy Research, a consulting firm. Much of that drop can be attributed to a sharp slowdown in Spain. Faced with high unemployment and an economic crisis, Spain slashed its generous subsidy for the panels last year because it was costing too much.

Many experts expect panel prices to fall further, though not by another 40 percent.

Manufacturers are already reeling from the price slump. For example, Evergreen Solar, which is based in Massachusetts, recently reported a second-quarter loss that was more than double its loss from a year earlier.

But some manufacturers say that cheaper panels could be a good thing in the long term, spurring enthusiasm among customers and expanding the market.

“It’s important that these costs and prices do come down,” said Mike Ahearn, the chief executive of First Solar, a panel maker based in Tempe, Ariz.

First Solar recently announced a deal to build two large solar arrays in Southern California to supply that region’s dominant utility. But across the United States, the installation of large solar systems — the type found on commercial or government buildings — has been hurt by financing problems, and is on track to be about the same this year as in 2008, according to Emerging Energy Research.

The smaller residential sector continues to grow: In California, by far the largest market in the country, residential installations in July were up by more than 50 percent compared with a year earlier. With prices dropping, that momentum looks poised to continue.

John Berger, chief executive of Standard Renewable Energy, the company in Houston that put panels on Mr. Hare’s home, said that his second-quarter sales rose by more than 225 percent from the first quarter.

“Was that as a product of declining panel prices? Almost certainly yes,” Mr. Berger said.

Expanded federal incentives have also helped spur the market. Until this year, homeowners could get a 30 percent tax credit for solar electric installations, but it was capped at $2,000. That cap was lifted on Jan. 1.

Mr. Hare in Texas cited the larger tax credit, which sliced about $23,000 from his $77,000 bill, as a major factor in his decision to go solar, in addition to the falling panel prices. Sensing a good deal, he even got a larger system than he had originally planned — going from 42 panels to 64. The electric bill on his 7,000-square-foot house and garage has typically run $600 to $700 a month, but he expects a reduction of 40 to 80 percent.

Mr. Berger predicts that with panel prices falling and the generous federal credit in place, utilities will start lowering rebates they offer to homeowners who put panels on their roofs.

One that has already done so is the Salt River Project, the main utility in Phoenix, which cut its homeowners’ rebate by 10 percent in June. Lori Singleton, the utility’s sustainability manager, said the utility had recently spent more than it budgeted for solar power, a result of a surge in demand as more solar installers moved into Arizona and government incentives kicked in.

California has been steadily bringing down its rebates. An impending 29 percent cut in rebates offered within the service area of Pacific Gas and Electric, the dominant utility in Northern California, means that “with the module price drop over the last few months, it is pretty much a wash,” Bill Stewart, president of SolarCraft, an installer in Novato, Calif., said in an e-mail message.

Even if falling rebates cancel out some of the solar panel price slump, more innovative financing strategies are also helping to make solar affordable for homeowners. This year about a dozen states — following moves by California and Colorado last year — have enacted laws enabling solar panels to be paid off gradually, through increased property taxes, after a municipality first shoulders the upfront costs.

Some installers have adopted similar approaches. Danita Hardy, a homeowner in Phoenix, had been put off by the prospect of spending $20,000 for solar panels — until she spotted a news item about a company called SunRun that takes on the upfront expense and recovers its costs gradually, in a lease deal, essentially through the savings in a homeowner’s electric bill.

“I thought well, heck, this might be doable,” said Ms. Hardy, who wound up having to lay out only $800 to get 15 solar panels for her home.

September 5, 2009

Good Energy: Solar Power at Home

If you would like to learn more on how to slash your electric bill and start saving money using homemade solar panels, click here to get  free information on our favorite solar panel instruction site.

Powered by WordPress