It pays to keep records. 5,670.1 of our kWh came from wind, which is 84.7%. The turbines generated 15.53 kWh/day, or 3.88 kWh each. The average output of each turbine was 161.8 watts for the year.
The solar generated 1,024.2 kWh, which is 15.3%. The solar generated 2.81 kWh/day, for an average output of 117.1 watts for the year. Looking at the data from September, when we installed an extra kW of solar power, it looks like the average output of the solar increased to 2.92 kWh/day, but the days are shorter until the Winter Solstice on Dec 21, and we don't get many sunny days during winter. That should increase drastically as the days become longer. I've never really had a chance to see what the solar can do yet because the extra capacity was installed during a period of the year when solar power at our latitude starts to drop off rapidly to the Winter Solstice. We have gotten basically nothing from solar for the entire month of December.
The output from the turbines from September to Dec 31 increased to 19.04 kWh/day, and during the month of December to 29.96 kWh/day. They're at their worst power production during the "dog days" of summer in July and August. They're at their best during the winter months when we get our strong norwester winds.
Our highest power consumption is during the winter time - roughly 30 kWh/day - and our standby gen ran for 17.9 hours during the month of December.
We have enough installed wind capacity. With the extra kW of solar that we installed in September, that should "do the trick" in reducing the gen run time thruout the year, especially during the "dog days" when the wind turbines don't perform well. It should also help during the coldest months of the year in January-March, as the days become longer and those are our highest power consumption months of the entire year.
So I don't believe we really need to make any changes - installing the extra solar capacity back in September should do it. If I multiply the 17.9 hours that the gen ran in December x 12 I come up with 214 hours for the year. So I think we're on the right track to cut the gen time to ~200 hours for 2012.
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Chris