popularBraveBook3184 posted Today 09:52 AM
Item 1 of 1
popularBraveBook3184 posted Today 09:52 AM
Costco Members: Ecoflow Delta Pro Ultra 18 KWH Solution only $7,600 $7600
$7,600
$9,000
15% offCostco Wholesale
Get Deal at RetailerGood Deal
Bad Deal
Save
Share
Leave a Comment
22 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.
Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time.
Thanks much in advance.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank GumboChief
My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.
Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time.
Thanks much in advance.
We'd need to know your power usage to estimate if this would work, but I'm going to guess it's not big enough for what you want. 4300sqft is a lot of house and I'm going to guess you have 2 (or more) AC units. And Texas is hot.
Another factor is if your appliances are gas or electric, if you have an electric range/stove/water heater/dryer that's going to be a good chunk. Best thing you can do is look at your power bill and see how much power you're using in a month and divide by 30 to get an idea of how long 18kwh will last you. For my 2500 sqft home in Florida, I typically use about 90-100kwh a day in summer, so this would only last a few hours.
As far as how to recharge it when there's no grid, your options are basically solar panels, a generator, or maybe a v2h electric vehicle
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Foolish... As a solution for power outages. To reduce power bills if you have solar or to capture cheaper night time power rates, they're quite good.
Generator: good for outages, but otherwise little utility and expensive to operate.
Solar + battery: expensive to implement but proven savings over their lifetime and good for power outages (though less flexible than generator)... Also cool your roof so some passive savings in cooling months.
I have a gen, still want solar with a gen input for extended outages.
My goal is to recoup costs through energy bill savings and for it to also serve as backup power during outages.
Also, what is the best way to recharge these during outages? I'm in Texas and when our grid fails we're out for 3/4 days at a time.
Thanks much in advance.
I'm in favor of having layered backup for vital infrastructure, like baseload power - especially if you have more dependent family members, like young children or elderly. Hopefully this video provides at least a minimum educational value for you, going forward. Good luck to you and yours.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBfWOmC
What's a 'gas line'.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment