Posted by s on December 31, 2005, 2:46 am
Does anyone have experiences with UNi-solar panels
Posted by =?iso-8859-1?Q?Roland_M=F6sl?= on December 31, 2005, 4:57 am
> Does anyone have experiences with UNi-solar panels
I think You could mean Uni-solar 3 layers amorph silicon
I have a 34 W peak foldable Uni-solar
2 kg and small enough for every backpack
Sorry, the page is not jet translated to English,
here is a link to the German version
http://notebook.pege.org/2005-photovoltaik
The good results at cloudy sky brought Uni Solar
to be under the top favorites for my planed
plus-energy-house
Maybe I will put 144 m² Uni-Solar on the roof.
--
Roland Mösl
http://car.pege.org cars and traffic
http://live.pege.org building and live
http://www.pege.org
Posted by Anthony Matonak on December 31, 2005, 8:07 am
Roland Mösl wrote:
>>Does anyone have experiences with UNi-solar panels
>
> I think You could mean Uni-solar 3 layers amorph silicon
>
> I have a 34 W peak foldable Uni-solar
> 2 kg and small enough for every backpack
>
> Sorry, the page is not jet translated to English,
> here is a link to the German version
>
> http://notebook.pege.org/2005-photovoltaik
Here is a link to the Uni-Solars website in English.
http://www.uni-solar.com/interior.asp?id 3
Anthony
Posted by Ecnerwal on January 3, 2006, 11:59 am
In article
> Does anyone have experiences with UNi-solar panels
Given their exceedingly high $/watt, (.vs. claims that they would be
cheap due to the manufacturing method), no. You need to have too much
money, or a desperate need for flexible panels for those to be a
non-insane option...
--
Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by
Posted by s on January 4, 2006, 4:49 am
>
>>Does anyone have experiences with UNi-solar panels
>
>
> Given their exceedingly high $/watt, (.vs. claims that they would be
> cheap due to the manufacturing method), no. You need to have too much
> money, or a desperate need for flexible panels for those to be a
> non-insane option...
>
pity everyone sees only the price of these panels rather than actually
looking at the data and research papers supporting their benefits. Try
comparing the real outputs of these panels at real operating temps (50
degrees C or more in summer) and I bet they would surprise many people.
A 64w unisolar panel will perfrom at the samelevel as an 80w crystaline
panel. DOnt just look at the price when looking for panels look at how
they perform at real operating temps. If you look around you can buy
these panels at good prices check out. www.unisun.com.au
Cheers