Shefwedfan wrote: » Thats what other companies are doing. According to Electric Ireland they wasted too much time going out to peoples house. Quoting and then the person wouldn't get planning permission or thought it was too expensive Now I can 100% understand that. Hence why for these types of job's when I am unsure if I will go ahead I will give Eircode and get them to review the site from google maps and they can price base on that. Saves them money coming out.....
gunnerfitzy wrote: » I can see your logic, however, I refuse to go to Step H just because the company couldn't be bothered doing Step D. I'm not going to give anyone thousands of euro of my money if they can't be bothered doing a site visit, answering my questions and giving a detailed quote.
niallers1 wrote: » 4.1kw with 4.8kwh battery €9,900 includes VAT So €6,100 after grant.
Shefwedfan wrote: » Just wondering has anyone got an actually quote and kit list from Electric Ireland for the base 2kW package. Or 1.8 I think it is What invertor do they install?
H.E. Pennypacker wrote: » I spoke with two companies who said that they fit the Electric Ireland setup but they used different kit so I don't think that there's a standard Electric Ireland kit. I'm open to correction on that though. I applied for the interest free credit deal and was told that I'd be contacted by a subcontractor.
gunnerfitzy wrote: » Quote: 12 x 310w panels (3.72kw) 5kw battery Eddi Zappi €13,300 inc VAT and after grant
gunnerfitzy wrote: » It was an interesting conversation I can tell you. When I brought up about the planning and 12m2 being maximum limit that was exempt the guy told me that 12m2 was 12 meters in length by 12 meters in height and I that I had nothing to worry about!! I then explained with the aid of a diagram what 12m2 actually was! I was told that the standing charge for night time electricity over a 24hr rate was an extra 50e/60e per month (if anyone doesn’t know - it’s not). When I asked for a formal quote I was told that the figures I got on the back of the sheet of paper was the best I’m going to get without ordering. I won’t name and shame as I don’t want a slap on the wrist or worse from a mod but If anyone is getting quotes and want to know the name of the company just send me a PM.
Shefwedfan wrote: » Reminds me of Activ8 sales guy for solar thermal I had out once
Shefwedfan wrote: » My brother is a tradesman. I also have a good few friends who are tradesman. In the last few years they could spend every night of the week going from one house to another quoting people. All these people are looking for something for nothing....For work/life balance they have had to stop. So I have no issue if they want to check you are really interested before spending time/money coming out. If really all you are doing is price checking against XYZ, easier just to quote over internet and if you want to go forward then site survey is way to go
gally74 wrote: » Can u p m me company
air wrote: » He's right that batteries still make no financial sense on grid at current price levels. I don't have them and end up paying the low user surcharge half the year. The best ROI will be on a PV only system.
unkel wrote: » You can't claim that outright without having more detailed split down of the install and parts costs A 2.4kWh battery costs €975 + VAT (€1,100 including the VAT when done by an approved installer) and you get €1,000 subsidy Looks to me like you should be able to add a small battery for very little money: €100 net cost of the battery + the extra install cost of the battery (can't see that being more than €100) Plus maybe the cost of upgrading the inverter to a hybrid one
KCross wrote: » Any quotes I've seen for battery supply and install are nowhere near the €1100 inc vat you are quoting so I'd be interested to hear where you are getting that price from. Or is that €1100 when you buy it directly yourself?
unkel wrote: » No it's the price of the 2.4kWh battery that's €975 + VAT
unkel wrote: » I was just wondering how much the cheapest solution would be to get a tiny battery in, so you have the infrastructure in place to add larger batteries in a few years time
unkel wrote: » But you're quite right, a hybrid inverter costs a lot more than a normal one but if you are going to need one in a few years time anyway, you might as welll install it now (I don't think inverters will come down in price relatively as much as solar panels and batteries over the next few years)