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Power

New Solar Shingles Can Be Nailed In Place (arstechnica.com) 86

FangVT writes: Ars Techinca reports on GAF Energy's new solar shingles which are designed to save on installation costs. They are not only designed to look similar to existing asphalt shingles but to be installed in much the same way, including being nailed in place. The system has moved the wiring to the top, so as to simplify inspections and repairs. "Because each one of our panels is 45 Watts and only 10 volts, we have access to a whole host of electronic components that don't have to be able to withstand 300 Watts, 50 volts," the company says. "That allows us to be more efficient in the electricity generated from those panels." And in what they say is a first, UL has certified the shingles both as solar panels and as roofing materials. The company also says they come with a 25 year warrant and will be offering a more comprehensive warranty that will also include guaranteed power output.

They wouldn't provide a hard number on the price, but "a homeowner won't pay any more for a GAF solar roof than they would if they were to get a new roof and have someone put solar on it," said GAF Energy CEO Martin DeBono. "That's our benchmark. We're half the cost of a Tesla solar roof in any given market right now."
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New Solar Shingles Can Be Nailed In Place

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  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2022 @06:16AM (#62144499)

    Showing it off it nice and all but there are plenty of things that end up being vaporware or an "unexpected cost" makes price 4x the original.

    I really hope this pans out because solar power is greatly underutilized.

    • Solar still isn't economically feasible.

      I say this as someone with a great roof that could provide all of my energy needs from April - Sept at the very least. When I looked into the install, however, I found that it would average out to being more than my normal power bill. Over twice as much annually. And I'm in CA.

      So as much as I'd like to go solar, I'll be waiting until they become more cost competitive.

      • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

        How exactly are you figuring your costs?
        Are you trying to pay off the cost of installing solar in one year? 5 years? 10 years?
        If you are getting basically free energy from April-Sept. and it is still costing you more than grid electricity (ignoring the cost of solar installation) I think you are doing something wrong (unless you just don't use electricity during those months anyway).
        If the amount you save on electricity over those 6 months (plus I'm sure you are getting at least some solar power during the

        • I looked at my total electrical costs over the year vs cost of installing solar amortized over 20 years.

          I didn't factor in things like efficacy drop off, and I chose 20 years because most of the installers around here offer 20 year warranties.

          • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

            If it takes you 20 years to recoup the cost of the installation and you are still paying twice what grid electricity costs you must either have really low grid electricity costs or extremely high solar installation costs.
            I realize that every installation case is different but from a quick search it appears that the average time to recoup installation costs is 7.5-10 years. If it is taking you 20 years to recoup cost then I would assume you are one of the extreme edge cases.

            • I guess. We're hydro and I have a smallish house with a virtually brand new efficient AC ( the single largest expenditure of electricity throughout the year ). I'd have loved to have gotten solar, it just didn't make financial sense.

      • Did your calculations assume net-metering pricing? There is a serious move in CA right now to terminate net-metering, which will effectively wipe out the cost-savings of most of my friends who installed solar PV on their roofs in the past few years.
    • Showing it off it nice and all but there are plenty of things that end up being vaporware or an "unexpected cost" makes price 4x the original.

      I really hope this pans out because solar power is greatly underutilized.

      Looking at their website https://www.gaf.com/en-us/abou... [gaf.com] they seem like a legit roofing business, this gives me more hope than som tech startup looking for funding.

    • by swilver ( 617741 )

      Solar is one of the most useless forms of power generation. When you need it most (night, winter) it is not there. All it does is overload the grid during sunny days. We're already reaching the point where delivering power back to grid will net you income because there's too much of it. If installations double or quadruple this will be standard.

      • Most places don't "need [electricity] most" at night. At night, lots of people are sleeping, most businesses are closed, etc. Hence the need for electricity is lower, not higher, at night.
        • Most places don't "need [electricity] most" at night. At night, lots of people are sleeping, most businesses are closed, etc. Hence the need for electricity is lower, not higher, at night.

          As more EV come online that will change in "interesting" ways. There will be a huge surge that will start when people get off work and continue to grow until most people are home with their vehicles plugged in. It'll peak sometime after midnight then slowly ramp down. And suddenly drop off when people head to work.

          During the summer solar will be a big help as a power source but only for a few hours. During the winter and night something else has to cover this new load. And it's one hell of a load. To

          • There will be a huge surge that will start when people get off work and continue to grow until most people are home with their vehicles plugged in. It'll peak sometime after midnight then slowly ramp down. And suddenly drop off when people head to work.

            That's purely a speculation. You can't *know* when fleets of BEVs are going to charge. Considering the duty cycle of an average car and the almost certainty of smart charging, it will almost certainly be in periods of low electricity rates. Speculating that this charging will happen during the night is speculating that future grids will have low electricity rates during the night, and this is impossible without knowing how future grids will look like. Knowing how future grids will look like means, for examp

  • It is one thing to make them cheap to install, and quite another to make them recyclable at their EOL. I could not find any information on their site about recycling.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by rxhxZa ( 8475165 )
      maybe there is no EOL for them? as at their EOL the homeowner can use them in there future easy bake back yard foundry?!
    • Virtue signalling alert.

    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      How often do you see normal roofing shingles get recycled at EOL? Most of the time they are just gathered up and tossed in a landfill.

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        How often do you see normal roofing shingles get recycled at EOL? Most of the time they are just gathered up and tossed in a landfill.

        That was one reason why I ended up with a standing-seam metal roof. When it finally needs replacing - maybe in 50 years - the material is exceptionally easy to recycle.

        I don't have a recycling plan for the solar panels mounted to the roof. Recycling panels isn't an established industry just yet - probably because something like 98% of all solar panels ever manufactured

      • by jbengt ( 874751 )
        Asphalt shingles are often recycled into asphalt pavement. Not that asphalt pavement is any good for the environment.
    • by ogar572 ( 531320 )
      Link the recycling of normal shingles. Nothing about the solar shingles yet. https://www.gaf.com/en-us/blog... [gaf.com]
  • by pele ( 151312 )

    But whenever one asks about COST and they say "oh it depends on a number of factors" instead of "xx per sq.m." then expect it to cost 10 times what you thought it would or should.

    • But whenever one asks about COST and they say "oh it depends on a number of factors" instead of "xx per sq.m." then expect it to cost 10 times what you thought it would or should.

      Not every roof is as simple as 2 flat panels laid down on either side of the central beam that spans the roof.

      In some American states the builders and homebuyers are well known for rooflines with wild geometries and insane slopes that do not lend to easy installation of anything.

      • This is how my house is. Huge verticals on a ranch. So My roof has more sq footage than my actual first floor and costs a ton due to all the extra labor it will take to scale the un-needed mountain peaks that need shingled.

    • Re:Funny (Score:4, Informative)

      by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2022 @07:56AM (#62144587)

      ...then expect it to cost 10 times what you thought it would or should.

      That is a pretty typical sales tactic. In this case, however, they claim to be half the cost of a Tesla roof. Of course, they don't specify if that's before or after the recent Tesla price increase.

      • There was a recent video on exactly this company and this product I watched a few days ago. To use a more simplistic language from the video: Their solar roof they expect to cost roughly double vs getting a non-solar roof. I believe their metric was something like $10,000 for a non solar + roughly $10,000 for rack mount solar panel install vs their solar roof that comes out to about $18,000. Also worth noting also from the video that GAF is already a major producer for non-solar roofing materials so they
    • Re:Funny (Score:4, Informative)

      by Jumperalex ( 185007 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2022 @08:01AM (#62144593)

      Totally there with you. But as stated in the article is that customer acquisition and installation costs should be much lower in any given area compared to typical panels. What that tells me is that the $/sq m and the more applicable metric, $/kW will be higher so they don't want to say that. And taking them at their word (risky, I know) that doesn't matter because what matters is installed cost and it is 100% true that it varies a LOT for all solar applications. Cost of labor, materials, complexity of install (of the new roof surface and the panels) varies wildly around the country.

      So "costs the same when installed" is a valid, albeit unverified, statement.

      The best part is, their panel costs should go down as production ramps up and competitors step in if this takes off. The proofs is still in the pudding if their claim that acquisition and installation costs really do go down and stay down relative to traditional solar installations.

      • How about insurance cost? How resistant are they to hail? I can't imagine the insurance companies going for this until they have a track record, especially with all of the hail damage claims we've had in the midwest recently.
        • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

          What is the hail resistance of normal solar panels?
          I would think it would be easier and cheaper to replace individual shingles/tiles that get hail damage than replacing a whole solar panel that gets hail damage.

    • I'm not going to take a chance on an unknown roofing shingle and an unknown solar panel, when the proven ones are available for the same price. But some people just think solar panels are so damn ugly, that they can afford to pay full price for this questionable investment.

      Those with lesser means tend to be less fussy.

    • Huh. I expect that every roof would cost the same because they're all the same shape, size, with the same pitch, same local building codes and inspection requirements, same orientation with respect to the sun, same latitude, same amount amount of shading, etc. I mean, I could see solar costing different amounts if all of those varied widely from house to house, but obviously they don't.

  • by schivvers ( 823289 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2022 @08:54AM (#62144673)
    These things are actually rated as SHINGLES! I do a lot of home renovation and building (2nd business) I can say the UL listing for the shingles themselves is worth something. No more..install a roof then puncture said roof to install the solar...then wait to see if there are leaks...then repair. This is fantastic. only my 2 cents.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      What actually is the UL rating for shingles? I'm guessing it covers common stuff for building materials like not being flammable and not containing dangerous compounds, but does UL also cover durability? What to they do, accelerated ageing?

  • Did I miss it somewhere? I didn't see any mention of output.
    • by Klaxton ( 609696 )

      "each one of our panels is 45 Watts", which isn't very much compared to modern solar PV panels, which average about 300 watts (in full sun).

      • Thanks, I did miss that. One of their panels is how big? If it's near the same size as the 300'ish watt commodity panels, that's definitely not going to be worth the expense. It does seem like the energy output is where they don't really want to talk about it. The text about how it might, maybe, possibly, end up paying for itself with an asterisk after it doesn't really make it sound like this is ready for prime time.
        • by Klaxton ( 609696 )

          Good point, I'm not seeing where they talk about the size of the panels. If they are approximately the same size as ordinary solar PV you are going to need about 6 times as much roof area to get the equivalent power output. That's a lot, and many houses will not have enough roof that is adequately illuminated by the sun to get that equivalent power.

        • Since they're talking about nailing and installing them like normal asphalt shingles, I'd guess that they're about the size of a normal asphalt shingle. The conventional shingles I've worked with before were about 36"x12", but a considerable portion of it (1/2? 2/3?) was overlapped by the shingle above. If that's the case with these, then I'd imagine that each solar-shingle is maybe 36"x6" of actual electricity generating part, aka ~1.5 sqft of solar with the covered part above handling the electrical conne
          • by jbengt ( 874751 )
            Look at the photos in TFA. They're much longer than normal shingles and the electrical connections are at the ends and they add a raised removable cover over the wiring running up and down the roof.
  • Can people actually afford to install them a standard roof is expensive enough of a thing to install in materials alone if these new solar roofing is even a quarter of the price of a standard roof it will be in that area of "Technology for Technology's sake because no one will lever install the thing due to pricing outside of the wealthy so they can have more more thing to be smug about over the poor working stiffs.
    • For most people, it is indeed the situation that you need to have money to save money.

      I replaced my roof shingles ~5 years ago. I think it was about $7000.

      I installed solar panels ~2 years ago. It was about $20k, not counting insentivies, rebates, tax credit, etc.

      I'm saving ~$1500 a year in energy costs, give or take. It will take 10+ years for me to recoup costs, but the panels should have an effective life of 25 or so years.

      • If it's actually a positive investment, you can just get a loan for it. Of course at that point you might as well just buy stocks and come out way ahead after a few years.

    • by Klaxton ( 609696 )

      People frequently borrow the money for solar panel installations. That's part of the sales pitch in fact, you can get them installed with no money down and then just make monthly fixed-cost payments. The payments are typically set to be less than your average electric bill, and unlike grid electricity they don't rise with inflation. After some number of years the loan is paid off and then the electricity is free. You may still have to pay grid fees, because in essence you are banking excess electricity to t

  • "a homeowner won't pay any more for a GAF solar roof than they would if they were to get a new roof AND have someone put solar on it"
    Emphasis added by me. A new regular roof would cost about $10k-$15k (Yes, I had this done a few years ago but insurance paid for it due to hail damage). But what they are saying is that you have to pay for a new roof plus the cost of putting solar on it. Oh, and it looks butt-ugly.

    I've been saying for years that the hell-bent-for-the-horizon push to go wind and solar remind

    • ...Wind and solar are going to get obliterated by Gen 4 nuclear and fusion power which could become a reality right before the installed base has to be replaced.

      That's some really optimistic thinking you have there. Even if we invented net positive fusion reactors tomorrow- it would still take decades to commercialize the technology and have them get permitted and built.

      Home solar panels have been available since the 1970s. That's 50 years. And only now are finally starting to get the solar shingles that have been promised for decades.

      Rolling out bulky, complex technology at scale takes a long time.

    • living in a hail prone area I see an integrated system getting damaged and replaced as a unit as better than two. Shingles + panels also are less palatable in some communities. While I don't care what my neighbors have on their roof I do like the idea of insuring my roof for an incremental cost. Remember too that high wind comes with hail and thunderstorms and I've seen panels ripped off of roofs because of the lift where most of the underlying roofing material stays in place. I realize that may be a tertia

    • What a silly argument.

      You are basically telling people not to install proven and working renewable power now, and instead wait for things that don't exist yet and / or have massive political headwinds and decades-long construction times before operating.

      You know that if someone installs solar panels today, they'll have already met ROI and probably have saved quite a bit of money by the time the first "gen 4" nuclear plant comes online, if one ever does. And there's no reason to think that it will be built

  • So what? They are much more expensive than standard solar panels, and infinitely more expensive than standard shingles. At the same time, they are a lot less efficient than Tesla's shingles.

    GAF is a big force, but these are still going to be a boutique item.

    This seems more like GAF trying to make sure they are positioned to keep their position in the roofing materials market for the future, not offer a mass market product for the present. A big part of it is to allow existing roofers to use the product,

    • If a regular roofing crew can install these, it's a huge deal. There are only so many solar installers in any given area, but roofing companies are everywhere. Also, the efficiency is said to be 23%.. That's at least on par with Tesla and supposed to be half the cost.

    • Well, if you had at least read the summary: they cost the same as normal solar panels + roof: so not more expensive.

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