NW Ontario Ford Lightning
Well-known member
- First Name
- Robert
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2025
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 301
- Reaction score
- 355
- Location
- NW Ontario Canada
- Vehicles
- 2024 F-150 SR Lightning XLT
- Occupation
- Contractor
Going solar for a home saves you just the cost of the utility-rate power, but going solar to charge your EV instead of paying for gasoline or DCFC typically saves a lot more money faster.
We built out our solar in stages over 3-4 years, and did it all ourselves. The Lightning was at the tail end of this but typically saves more actual $ per day than the house and shop energy use, because of the cost of gasoline we don't buy now. I cut our utilty bill from 400/mth to $40, but the EV charged at home saves over $600/mth in "not gas" transportation.
With long summer days, our 13kW of solar panels runs 37kWh of home/shop daily loads plus 20-30kWh of EV charging easily, and an 130kWh home battery gives us a few days of poor weather run time without issue.
The cost of our full solar build was about half the cost of the Lightning...but we expect the solar will last a lot longer...and the cost of utility power only seems to go one direction...happy with our system.
Another way is to use ToU (time of use) rates - if these are significantly lower overnight, to charge a battery system that runs inverters to power your home during higher cost utility power. No solar panels required (but can be added later if you like). Our overnight rate is about 1/4 of the daily rate.
For the OP - unless you only work nights, I wouldn't waste your time trying to do solar just for the EV. Do the research and if it makes sense for you, build out a full system for your home and EV - it will depend a lot on location and regulations - ground mounted solar is easy compared to roof mounted due to regulations. Read the NEC rules on roof mounted solar and you will see why.
None of my 13kW of solar panels are on the roof of my home.
We built out our solar in stages over 3-4 years, and did it all ourselves. The Lightning was at the tail end of this but typically saves more actual $ per day than the house and shop energy use, because of the cost of gasoline we don't buy now. I cut our utilty bill from 400/mth to $40, but the EV charged at home saves over $600/mth in "not gas" transportation.
With long summer days, our 13kW of solar panels runs 37kWh of home/shop daily loads plus 20-30kWh of EV charging easily, and an 130kWh home battery gives us a few days of poor weather run time without issue.
The cost of our full solar build was about half the cost of the Lightning...but we expect the solar will last a lot longer...and the cost of utility power only seems to go one direction...happy with our system.
Another way is to use ToU (time of use) rates - if these are significantly lower overnight, to charge a battery system that runs inverters to power your home during higher cost utility power. No solar panels required (but can be added later if you like). Our overnight rate is about 1/4 of the daily rate.
For the OP - unless you only work nights, I wouldn't waste your time trying to do solar just for the EV. Do the research and if it makes sense for you, build out a full system for your home and EV - it will depend a lot on location and regulations - ground mounted solar is easy compared to roof mounted due to regulations. Read the NEC rules on roof mounted solar and you will see why.
None of my 13kW of solar panels are on the roof of my home.
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