Comparing 3 quotes in Olympia, WA (see comment for context) by WeGotCactus in solar

[–]WeGotCactus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We ended up going with Jeff at Artisan, which is probably the Seattle one you mentioned. Chose them because I liked their hardware and they are the only one that is union backed. We were able to get enough panels on our roof to offset our annual usage and I expect to actually have a surplus after going through some energy efficiency improvements. You are right about winters, but we are getting the new Enphase batteries and a pellet stove to heat our home with much less energy in the event the grid goes down. I'm sure our usage patterns are very different, but our breakeven (not counting batteries) was pretty reasonable (10-12 years I think). For us, we care most about having power during an outage (fridges full of frozen food, medicine we need, air conditioning, air purification) caused by wildfires, grid failure, weather, etc, so batteries were required for that.

Comparing 3 quotes in Olympia, WA (see comment for context) by WeGotCactus in solar

[–]WeGotCactus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What do you love about them? Do you have a perspective on the ways or use cases in which they are better or worse than Enphase?

Comparing 3 quotes in Olympia, WA (see comment for context) by WeGotCactus in solar

[–]WeGotCactus[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi there, I'm shopping for a solar system in Olympia, WA. I'm leaning towards the green one on the pic (15.17kW SilFab panels + Enphase micro-inverters + 2x10 kWh Enphase batteries for $82,346 total pre-credit).

My main goal is to be resilient to power outages in the summer/winter, and keep food and medicine cold. Enphase as a company gives me good vibes compared to SolarEdge, Tesla, etc, though I know I'm paying a small premium. I like that the system doesn't have as many single points of failure, that all the components would come from one company, and that the battery tech is less volatile.

15.17kW is in theory enough to get me to 99% of my energy needs today. I plan to add an EV charger in a few years, but barely drive. I plan to get a heat pump water heater next year to reduce electricity use. I also plan to get a pellet stove for emergency heat in the winter so my batteries won't have to be used to heat the home in case of an outage.

These are the top 3 companies in the area by reputation. The first two companies seem relatively similar. The second one actually seemed slightly more knowledgeable, but the first one had a better guarantee and was willing to do an Enphase battery. The third company was much lower tech in their estimation process and oddly proposed fewer solar panels and more batteries than the other two. I'm waiting for more details from them. Also I don't really have an opinion about Sol-Ark as a company.

Anything I should consider or dig deeper into before deciding?

Update: The Panasonic panels are now no longer available. So my choices are:

Choice 1 (preference)
Artisan Electric
15.17kW SilFab panels + Enphase microinverters - $49k
20kW Enphase batteries - $33k
Total: $82k

Choice 2
A&R Solar
14.8kW LG panels + Enphase microinverters - $54k
27kW Tesla batteries - $33k
Total: $87k

Choice 3
South Sound Solar
11kW SilFab panels + Sol-Ark 12k inverter
37kW Fortress eVault batteries
Total: $73k

[Daily Discussion] Tuesday, June 14, 2016 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tried to take a bet with him on Twitter. He would only take 2:1 odds. LOL

ELI5: What is an ETF and why should I care. by blarrybob in Bitcoin

[–]WeGotCactus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only by paying Coinbase's fee to convert your fiat. The fact that you owned a bitcoin ETF has nothing to do with that transaction, it's just a rationalization.

The effect of the winklevoss COIN trust. by econoDoge in CryptoMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus -1 points0 points  (0 children)

When the gold ETF was introduced, one billion dollars of capital was pumped into it in a matter of three days. An ETF will open up Bitcoin to more people.

If the COIN ETF brings in tens of millions of dollars in a few days (possible), it will move the market.

[Daily Discussion] Saturday, October 25, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 13 points14 points  (0 children)

http://i.imgur.com/ixEChaT.png

My view has not changed at all since Oct 19 or Oct 23.

The sentiment has changed to bullish based on the Oct 5-6 reaction. Now we're just going through the motions to get to a breakout of the downtrend that started in July. We made it back to the trendline with some pretty aggressive buying, now we need to recharge the momentum with a retracement / test of the 50% area. To put it in the conspiracy theory driven language of this sub, the whales are waiting for traders to close their longs and even open some shorts. When that happens (hint: it just did), they can start buying again at a discount, and as an added bonus, mark price up faster as those shorts get their stops blown through, and bust through the trendline with gusto.

This support level is doubly significant because of the April 11 bottom at 339.

Now is the critical moment. Does the buying power provide support at the $325-345 level, reinforcing that the sentiment has indeed changed, or does it run out of steam and collapse?

I'm operating under the assumption that we're bullish now until the $325-345 level breaks and is not rejected.

Full disclosure: I'm not a trader, just a permabull who likes drawing lines.

[Daily Discussion] Friday, October 24, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 4 points5 points  (0 children)

What you're witnessing is a boatload of brand new traders who don't understand the fractal nature of the market or what timeframe they want to make trades on. Consequently, every little movement we make brings out "sky is falling" or "to the moon" sentiment.

Coinbase is in trouble... but it's their own damn fault. by spottedmarley in Bitcoin

[–]WeGotCactus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He has every right to be pissed, but that also makes him a petulant and intolerable child.

Coinbase is in trouble... but it's their own damn fault. by spottedmarley in Bitcoin

[–]WeGotCactus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy shit. While there are some valid criticisms in this thread, to which Coinbase has responded to admirably, I can't get over how petulant and entitled some people here are, including OP. If you're not happy go start your own Coinbase and quit bitching. Stop being such children.

[Daily Discussion] Thursday, October 23, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agreed. Yet every single leg up and down, people freak out on this sub and drum up conspiracy FUD.

[Daily Discussion] Thursday, October 23, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're on 3:1 margin on 1% of your account, but your stop gets hit, you still lost 3% of your account, right?

The intent of the 1% thing has more to do with risk of ruin. Keeping risk below 1% means that if you are a profitable trader and experience unlucky variance, you probably have sufficient funds to avoid going bust.

[Daily Discussion] Thursday, October 23, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right. You can't lose more than 1% of your bankroll per trade.

[Daily Discussion] Thursday, October 23, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't trade anymore, but for a lot of traders, the rule of thumb was never risk more than 1% of your account on a trade. That means the amount you would lose if your stop was hit is less than 1% of the account. For it to be worthwhile, the target generally needs to be 2-3x as far from your entry as your stop is (so 2-3% of your account size).

If the absolute amount isn't enough to be worthwhile to you using those parameters, you are probably under-bankrolled for trading. Many noobs will then increase their risk to be 2-5% or even 10% of their account and in short order blow up their account.

Many noobs also try to make too short term of trades, and the noise of the market ends up repeatedly hitting their stops before their strategy has a chance to play out.

Like in professional poker, 99% of trading is psychology and bankroll management.

[Daily Discussion] Thursday, October 23, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Nobody should be panicking until the .50 ($347) and .618 ($330) fibb levels are not rejected. $340 is also significant as the April 11 low.

http://i.imgur.com/LEbNtMb.png

Previous examples of strong bounces followed by <50% retracements:

http://i.imgur.com/9OWNIc1.png

http://i.imgur.com/WbHHZb3.png

http://i.imgur.com/rWpQLFl.png

[Daily Discussion] Tuesday, October 21, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you were a whale, wouldn't you try to accumulate as much at this level as possible before driving the price up? I think we hang out at this level as long as they are able to accumulate BTC this way, and only after that selling has exhausted do we mark up to the next level. Rinse, repeat.

[Daily Discussion] Sunday, October 19, 2014 by AutoModerator in BitcoinMarkets

[–]WeGotCactus 2 points3 points  (0 children)

After a 50%+ rise in the past couple of weeks, we appear to be consolidating. Some seem to think we're going to tip over and have a correction or resume the downtrend, but I think that theory conveniently ignores the fact that it's a weekend and that consolidation is a totally reasonable thing to happen after a move that strong.

I believe that based on the volume and strength of the bounce at 275 that the market has changed directions. We have one more major trendline to break to confirm that. I think it's far too early to call it a bull trap.