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Solar Panels Power Home Theater

by Clint DeBoer last modified April 21, 2009
Photo Credit: Jay Greene Photography

Photo Credit: Jay Greene Photography

Can a home theater really be green? The Home Theater Specialists of America (HTSA) says it can—and has built what it claims is the first “off-the-grid home theater” powered by solar panels.

The “Guiltless Green Home Theater,” which has a 100-inch screen and 5.1 channels of surround sound, uses energy collected from four roof-mounted solar panels. The 175-watt Sharp solar panels collect up to 700 watts per hour during the day, which the HTSA says provides about 22,000 watts per week, enough for 19 hours of off-the-grid home entertainment per week. (The figures are based on an average of 4.5 hours of sunlight per day in the Northeast and the theater’s 1,150-watt-per-hour draw, at full capacity. The house has other electrical draws as well, so we’ll consider the figures theoretical.)

The solar PV system is also tied to the grid, so when it’s making more power than the house is using, it sends power back to the community’s electrical system and turns the meter back at the house.”

“It’s time we address the energy use of the systems we install, because their environmental impact and expense are not trivial,” says Richard Glikes, Executive Director of HTSA. “When people see this project, they’ll learn that a solar home theater isn’t something out of science fiction. It’s a practical solution we can install today, and one that ultimately pays for itself.”

According to Glikes, the theater cost about $29,575 with modest modifications to a room, and the solar system $5,800 to install. Though the solar system will earn a 30 percent federal tax credit and another 35 percent state tax credit, bringing its cost down to a little over $2,000. It will also earn credits from the local utility for producing power, and Glikes said the system will pay for itself in three years.

The theater is installed in a model home at the White Horse development of builder Nolen Companies in Pennsylvania, and the solar system was installed by LG Energy Solutions.

HTSA member HiFi House did the electronics installation, which includes a Sharp XV-Z15000 1080p DLP front projector, 100-inch Stewart Filmscreen, five Speakercraft in-wall and in-ceiling speakers and a subwoofer, Integra A/V receiver, Sharp Blu-ray player, Monster power conditioner, lighting by Lutron, control by Universal Remote Control, wiring by Monster Cable and Salamander furniture.

Other green features are provided by the Monster power conditioner that can cut power completely to some components, which eliminates vampire or standby power loads, and the Salamander theater recliners that use no harmful chromium in the leather tanning process.

We’ll no doubt see other home theaters powered by the sun and wind and other renewable energies. And maybe we’ll see some powered directly by alternative energies, much like many solar thermal systems heat hot tubs and pools.

Read the Full Article at ElectronicHouse.com

View the Slideshow

by Clint DeBoer last modified April 21, 2009

Recent Forum Posts:

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Duff man posts on November 18, 2009 17:31
10010011;556633
Also consider that unless you live in a state with good government incentives and tax rebates, it could take several decades to pay for it's self.


Or, you could put the thousands a solar system will cost against your mortgage instead and save many times more in annual mortgage interest than you will ever save in electricity.

And your house will be paid off faster freeing up more money to upgrade your home theatre...
Tommy2009 posts on November 17, 2009 23:05
This is interesting topic and gave many good post. It is very useful and informative.
Erika111 posts on September 12, 2009 08:13
Hello friends,

If you would like to make good use of the sun, it is very doable without costing a lots amount of money. See this Solar Panels and system. Solar Home Stezader 4 kW off grid energy generator system.1,500 Watt off grid Solar Panel System.
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off grid system [hardysolar.com]
s162216 posts on July 07, 2009 15:09
As long as people want electronic equipment theres going to be loads of energy used in just in the manufacture of the components, the PCB etc.
You have to extract the silicone sand, process it into semi conductors using machinery, make the PCB, solder the components in, make a case for the PCB, distribute the product. All of that is going to use absolutely loads of energy in the end, no matter what you do. Just actually using the equipment is a only a very small part of the energy used.

Bottom line: getting solar panels is a waste of time unless you want to reduce your electricity bill. Hardly any energy is actually saved.
thebuckaman posts on July 07, 2009 11:20
Thats awesome
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