It depends on where you are. But if you have 5 full sun hours for example, which is typical for the US and accounts for weather and sun angle, you would take 3300 kw-hrs/5 sun hrs per day/30 days per month = 22 kw/day. So if you take 22kw, or 22,000Watts / 250 watts = 88 panels. That's a lot!
Most places in the US have what we call 4-5 'full sun hours' per day, which takes into account weather and seasonal shifts. So if you need 3300kwh per month, you'd need about 110 kw-hrs per day / 4.5 sun hours /day = 24 kilowatts. 24 kilowatts equals 24,000 watts, and you divide by .80 for efficiencies and voltage losses = 30,000 watts. so 30,000 dvidided by 250 = 120 panels.
At the end of a solar lease, typically after 20-25 years, the homeowner can choose to renew the lease, purchase the solar panels at market value, have the solar company remove the panels, or potentially extend the lease on a month-to-month basis.
It all depends on the amount of solar panels you have and their photovoltaic conversion rate. Many people live straight off there solar panels and there's many others who produce more electricity then they use in a month and get paid for it from the electric company.
Solar panels are a great option to use to reduce your electricity bill. For your first month's bill on your 2500 sq. ft. home you can see a reduction anywhere from $10 up to $100.
It is hard to calculate exactly how much money solar panels can save you, but it is estimable. Homeowners and business report that they've cut their costs by 50 to 90 percent. So, following that, the more you normally spend each month, say $1000 per month, you can cut that in half to $500 and save $6000 per year. It all depends on your situation.
they are good for us, because they provide energy, hot water, and light without wasting money every month. they are also good for our earth and environment.
As much as anything it will depend on your local weather - mostly cloud-cover - you need accurate, professional advice specific to your locality Or advice from someone else locally who has some panels installed.
Different regions have different charge rates for electricity, but assuming you live on the west coast you would save roughly $50 a month.
The price for a delivery would probably would probably depend on your location. My search resulted to a price of around 19 dollars a month.
It's called reverse racism. We go to great lengths to accommodate blacks in a day and age when they have numerous exclusive programs, organizations channels, and publications, etc. It would be offensive and "racist" for an exclusive white publication, channel, or organization to exist. Unfortunately, this is what America has become.
It depends on your location, the orientation and type of the panels and how many panels used, for example a typical 175 Sharp photovoltaic (PV) panel is 1575 x 826 x 46 mm in dimension so you are limited by physical mounting space on your roof. Assuming you have an array of those panels facing the equator that is rated at 5.25KW nominal for the entire array, you would multiply that by the average amount of sun hours available in your geographic location to find out how much you can produce in a day, then multiply that by 30 days or whatnot. That 5.25KW system in Florida (for example) might put out between 850 ~ 900 KW/Month.
There really is no best survey panel. Each survey is seeking something different than another survey. When a survey panel gets a project they will contact all of their members who match the demographics for that particular survey. You never know when a panel is going to have a project that matches your demographic. So your best option is be a member of as many survey panels as possible. Some panels may only need you once a month, or less. By being a member of several panels you greatly increase your opportunities to participate. Legitimate survey panels are now easily found by doing a search on google. Do not pay to join any survey site. The sites that ask you to pay to be a member are usually charging you for a list of survey panels that you can find for free.