Solar Panels on MicroHouse 3: Difference between revisions

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www.tsu.co/OpenSourceEcology/16901327 We used 136Watt Unisolar Laminate Panels that we glued on to the flat, ridged roofing panels. The solar cells were $76 for each of the 14 panels. the roofing metal, trim, screws totaled $1770 - about $4/sf for the 420 sf south-facing roof section. Not cheap - we are considering forming our own metal next time and just using a stock roll of 24 gauge roof steel. The panels snap into each other. https://opensourceecology.trovebox.com/photos/page-1/album-2h/list
 
www.tsu.co/OpenSourceEcology/16901327  
 
We used 136Watt Unisolar Laminate Panels that we glued on to the flat, ridged roofing panels. The solar cells were $76 for each of the 14 panels. the roofing metal, trim, screws totaled $1770 - about $4/sf for the 420 sf south-facing roof section. Not cheap - we are considering forming our own metal next time and just using a stock roll of 24 gauge roof steel. The panels snap into each other. https://opensourceecology.trovebox.com/photos/page-1/album-2h/list
 
[[Category:Microhouse 3]]

Latest revision as of 15:51, 4 July 2019

Adding solar laminate panels to our open source Compressed Earth Block (CEB) MicroHouse 3 takes the structure from the stone age to the digital age. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocUEZujd2hw&amp%3Blist=UUjvBN1r7UXXqmIbx_u7bIAw

www.tsu.co/OpenSourceEcology/16901327

We used 136Watt Unisolar Laminate Panels that we glued on to the flat, ridged roofing panels. The solar cells were $76 for each of the 14 panels. the roofing metal, trim, screws totaled $1770 - about $4/sf for the 420 sf south-facing roof section. Not cheap - we are considering forming our own metal next time and just using a stock roll of 24 gauge roof steel. The panels snap into each other. https://opensourceecology.trovebox.com/photos/page-1/album-2h/list