Tesla Solar Glass Roof is About to TAKE OFF!

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  • Опубліковано 13 тра 2024
  • Solar Roof: Thinking about Buying a Tesla EV / Solar / Battery? Use my Link!
    geni.us/GoTesla
    The Tesla Solar Glass Roof was one of the biggest announcements in the solar industry. Yes 4 years later, it has been a commercial failure, with homeowners seeing initial quotes double by the time it came to install. So what happened? Why has it been such a struggle, and is it too late for Tesla's ambitious solar project? Let's figure this out together!
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    Chapters
    0:00 - Introduction
    1:50 - Intentional Design
    2:57 - First Hand Experience
    6:20 - Installing Glass Roof
    8:00 - Durability
    9:50 - Power of Insulation
    10:45 - Underlayment & Hands on
    12:30 - Prices
    what we'll cover
    two bit da vinci,tesla solar roof,tesla solar tiles,tesla energy,solar roof tesla,tesla solar glass roof,tesla solar glass,tesla solar roof tile,tesla solar roof tiles,tesla solar,tesla solar-glass roof,tesla solar roof cost,tesla solar roof review,tesla solar roof vs solar panels,solar glass roof,solar glass roof tiles,solar glass roof tile,Tesla Solar Glass Roof has a PROBLEM - Here's How we FIX IT,Solving Tesla Solar Glass Roof's BIGGEST Problem!, Tesla Solar Glass Roof is About to TAKE OFF!
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 463

  • @TwoBitDaVinci
    @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому +1

    Buying a Tesla? Use my link! geni.us/GoTesla

    • @typxxilps
      @typxxilps Місяць тому

      the prices in the USA or your area must be incredible high or overpriced compared to here in central Europe.
      30 kWp on a complicated roof facing south but separated in the middle by a dormer of 7 m width with a chimney for the wood oven and another one for the oil central heating was 22000€ incl. a 15 kWh lfp battery, but of cause no tesla stuff cause they could not even write an offer for a battery.
      Therefore how long would it take to get a quote for a whole roof from Tesla ?
      And here in europe there have been shingle cells out for years so Tesla has competition but again those shingles are way to expensive compared to the current solar panel prices which are here below 200€ incl. tax for each kWp , panel only without the under construction which is here about 80€ per kWp, so 280€ or roughly 300$ per kWp without the inverter side.
      Prices have dropped by 50% since the china is pushing its production into the EU.
      And they also have been able to conquer heatpump market shares most recently, a 12 kW monobloc heatpump without subsidies is shipped to EU for 2000 $ incl. customs and vat.

  • @mikejbam
    @mikejbam 4 місяці тому +90

    Calling a 4000+ sq ft single family home environmentally friendly is pretty funny. I would put it more in the "prepper" category, but still pretty cool.

    • @ajnasreddin
      @ajnasreddin 4 місяці тому +8

      Everything is bigger in Texas.

    • @bloong1080
      @bloong1080 4 місяці тому +7

      This is the contradiction at the heart of the modern environmentalist movement. Humans have grown used to high energy consumption and materialism. If you want to fix the environmental issues, you need to be less modern. It's as simple as that. Installing your own power plant (solar roof/batteries), water tank, propane generator, etc, imagine if everyone on earth did that? It's so incredibly inefficient per capita. If you actually want to reduce your environmental footprint, go live in a crowded building and stop using transportation, electronics, and hunt for your food.

    • @dhayes907
      @dhayes907 4 місяці тому

      ​@bloong1080 then bring your gutted, tongue out deer home on public transportation.

    • @chimerawizard5639
      @chimerawizard5639 4 місяці тому +4

      welcome to Texas where everything is bigger.

    • @frankbaran5698
      @frankbaran5698 4 місяці тому +1

      Pennsylvania has a special new subsidy for retrofitting homes for solar energy. My house is ideal, one of the specialists involved in the program told me. The roof faces south. It has no obstructions such as trees, dormers or nearby buildings. The angle of the sun is appropriate to the climate. He recommended against installing solar.
      Why? My house is too small. The roof covers 450 square feet. Tiny. The cost of solar electricity and the cost of buying electricity from the grid are identical. But before solar panels can be installed, according to the specialist, I would have to replace my existing shingled roof because the shingles are halfway through their life cycle. I can't afford to re-shingle my roof. So for me, solar energy is dead.
      I might note that nearly property owners within a half mile of my house face the same situation. Or worse. Like me, they live in a densely built city. Their houses, like mine, are 100 years old or older. Many houses are duplexes. In half the cases, the roofs face north. Most south-facing roofs are obstructed by trees or dormers. The home owners or renters have small backyards, so the choice for the owners is either solar or places for the kids to play.
      Unless cities demolish densely populated housing and replace the land with McMansions like Ricky's or the gentleman from Texas, no one here can afford solar energy. For most low- and moderate-income folks, solar energy is wishful thinking.

  • @Simon_Rafferty
    @Simon_Rafferty 4 місяці тому +44

    I have an older house with a complicated, unhelpful roof. I built a solar porch with 30' x 16' of panels. It's only 6kW - but with 14kWh of batteries, it's enough for 9 months of the year. I'm surprised more people don't do similar. You get a nice shaded porch & deck out of it too. Total cost of the groundworks, steelwork, panels, battery & inverter was about $30k.
    It will take 6 years to pay for itself - but like you said, the most important thing it gives us is independence from the grid.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 4 місяці тому +4

      my electric bill is less than 50/ month from the utility. so solar would never be worth it

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому +2

      That’s amazing!!

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому +3

      Thinking about adding a porch system to my system as our current system is close but not quite enough

    • @jameswilson5165
      @jameswilson5165 4 місяці тому

      A good part of the problem with the porch solar method would be uninformed HOAs. Sadly, the average wage slave in this country can't afford to do this, and that's a shame because we don't have fancy homes that have HOAs.

    • @Simon_Rafferty
      @Simon_Rafferty 4 місяці тому +3

      @@jameswilson5165 Luckily, we don't have HOA's, just the local planning authority. They are sometimes negative about Solar - but this went through planning approval without a hitch.

  • @xiaoka
    @xiaoka 4 місяці тому +63

    The promise of the Tesla roof when it was launched was that you could replace your existing roof with a solar roof and get a better product for about the cost of a new roof plus separate solar panels.
    That clearly hasn’t worked out. In this guys’ case he could have just as easily put regular panels on top of the metal roof on that same building. Especially because no one can see that roof the aesthetic value is basically wasted.

    • @222INFINITY
      @222INFINITY 4 місяці тому +8

      Yes plus factor in $150K for a meager 17 KWH of solar and only 50 KWH of storage, this is a $10K system, not $150K.

    • @NeblogaiLT
      @NeblogaiLT 4 місяці тому

      You can install traditional solar panels with water-proofing in between them, thus serving as roof, saving money on roofing materials and work too.

    • @ksnax
      @ksnax 4 місяці тому +5

      @@NeblogaiLT I could be wrong, but conventional panels are generally not walkable - and that may be a code requirement for some situations.

    • @dustman96
      @dustman96 4 місяці тому +4

      @@ksnax You can walk on them if you're careful and not too heavy. If you step on the frames no problem. I used to be a solar installer, we walked all over them during large commercial installs, I never broke one doing so.

    • @frankbaran5698
      @frankbaran5698 4 місяці тому

      Another problem is trees being in the way. Our city prides itself as being a Tree City USA from the National Arbor Foundation. No street trees can be removed or pruned without the permission of the City's arborist. There is nothing in the city's ordinance that says street trees can be cut down for solar energy projects.@@ksnax

  • @marklefler4007
    @marklefler4007 4 місяці тому +158

    Clickbait title..Glad to see more about the system, but the title is bad. The owner seems.very happy, so that is not an epic failure. All new technology is expensive until it gets redesigned and cheaper.

    • @timboatfield
      @timboatfield 4 місяці тому +18

      It actually made me not want to watch it on that basis. I'd have missed an interesting vid, if the quality of the channel hadn't swayed me.

    • @xiaoka
      @xiaoka 4 місяці тому +14

      It is a failure vs what was actually promised.

    • @jonevansauthor
      @jonevansauthor 4 місяці тому +10

      Well, I kind of thought we'd get info about what's good, and then a few minutes at least on what isn't going well with solar roof - such as the pathetic number of installs. I completely missed it even though I've watched this twice more or less. I'm honestly wondering if there's a part 2 or some footage that got missed out.

    • @EarthCreature.
      @EarthCreature. 4 місяці тому

      Wake up from your Musk cult

    • @xiaoka
      @xiaoka 4 місяці тому +4

      @@jonevansauthoryeah that’s the question. Why has Tesla failed to ramp it up?

  • @clydesoles2451
    @clydesoles2451 4 місяці тому +9

    There's another problem for people who live in snow country: avalanche! If you live where you can get 1 to 2 feet of snow in a storm, be warned that when the sun comes out the next day it warms the snowpack to the point that the entire load cuts lose at once due to the slick surface (asphalt shingle holds it in place for normal melting). Someone below can get hit with hundreds or thousands of pounds of falling snow. Not an issue in San Diego or Texas but a design factor to consider in Colorado and other places.

    • @drooplug
      @drooplug 4 місяці тому +2

      That's what snow guards are for. You'll need them for metal and slate roofs, as well.

    • @clydesoles2451
      @clydesoles2451 4 місяці тому

      Depending on roof angle, snow density, etc, those work great for up to about 8" of snow. Not so much when there's 12+" , just not enough bond to the surface like standard shingle provide. Leaving roof space below the panels helps a lot that that isn't a Tesla option.

  • @davemiller3947
    @davemiller3947 4 місяці тому +7

    Our Tesla solar roof was installed October 2021, in SW Washington state. I agree about roof design for solar, but I wouldn't go as extreme as this guy. Personally I hate shed roofs. One thing I did to make more clear space on the south plane was move a vent from the south to the north plane. It isn't hard to do in most cases. But I think houses should be designed with no vents on the south planes, i.e. put the vents on gable ends or the north planes. Tesla actually installed a lot of PV tiles on the north plane as well, fortunately my "new" vent did not interfere with those. In terms of ROI, if I can skip a roof replacement in 21 years (which I think is likely), the extra cost is definitely worth it. Or if I get invited to participate in a VPP (not yet, but very likely), the ROI will be much better. Part of the problem with Tesla solar roof is Tesla seems to lack a clear commitment to making them profitable and successful. Elon doesn't give them much love - but then again he is a wildcard, so that may be a good thing. I do think Tesla solar roofs make sense, but not on complex or shaded roofs. Our setup: 10.6kW + 2 powerwalls, total cost $79k minus 27% tax rebates. 2300 ft^2 house, nothing fancy, built 1990. Produces more than we use, even here in the cloudiest part of the country. Including the $12/month connection fee, our power bill last year was $5.10. We have been extremely happy with the roof and its performance.

    • @d.pollard5962
      @d.pollard5962 11 днів тому +1

      that's amazing. Cheers and thanks for sharing. I hope to build my dream home someday with all these advancements to enjoy and hand down to my kids

  • @Sekir80
    @Sekir80 4 місяці тому +14

    Thanks Ricky for making this video! I've always clenched when saw those intricate roofs, thinking, how on earth will you put solar on them? Therefor, when it came to designing my home I told the architect to just design the simplest roof, maximizing the area I'll be able to put solar on.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому +4

      I thought the same thing!

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 4 місяці тому

      ​@@TwoBitDaVinci
      A rectangular house oriented towards yhe sun generally has more cost benefits than other house styles like lower taxes, less building costs, less maintenance, etc. Feng shui advocates square houses as well...

    • @dustman96
      @dustman96 4 місяці тому +2

      Those intricate roofs are dumb for a lot of reasons.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 4 місяці тому

      @@dustman96
      Not sure much intricate but compound, but essentially agreed.

  • @chuckm260
    @chuckm260 4 місяці тому +7

    A lot of people here are pointing out the video title is clickbait. I'd have to agree somewhat, especially since Ricky did not do a good job connecting his content to the title (or vice versa). Most people have a problem with the word EPIC, myself included, but be that as it may, I don't have a problem with "failure," you just have to read between the lines of Ricky's video. .... My take away is that if the roof is not simple, flat, no protrusion roof like the one of the Texas home, the cost of putting on a Tesla solar becomes way too cost prohibitive because of all the extra time (and probably material that gets wasted) from having to make all those special angle cuts when there multiple roof planes that meet up and not a full solar roof panel can be used. I believe that's the failure Ricky poorly explained / tied in with the title. ... Still have not seen any update from @Two Bit da Vinci (Ricky) which is IMHO would go a long way in assuaging those who have complained about the title and the intent of what was meant to be conveyed in the video. ... I'll be darn. Just as I'm finishing writing this up, Ricky puts out an update. Haven't read it yet so this should be interesting. ... Nope, unfortunately nothing useful ,,, yet! ;)

  • @georgeoriold8798
    @georgeoriold8798 4 місяці тому +21

    I find the topics you pick for your show really interesting and relevant. On solar roofs, it seems that house design needs to change. The focus needs to change from curb appeal to practicality. Subdivisions need to be oriented in such a way that the predominant roof needs to face south for use with solar panels or solar roofs. This is a municipal requirement issue. It may take a private developer to jump start this type of development.

    • @seanhoude
      @seanhoude 4 місяці тому +5

      Home design is virtually unchanged since colonial times; before plumbing and septic, heating and cooling, let alone electricity and Internet. We can do much better.

    • @Wol747
      @Wol747 4 місяці тому +1

      I would be very concerned about that foam insulation if it’s the stuff that burns and gives off cyanide gas.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 4 місяці тому

      It's not an either/or situation. You can have both, and both are important. It's a matter of problem solving.

  • @pablovial11
    @pablovial11 4 місяці тому +4

    Excellent video! Thanks for sharing.
    Remember that this pricing is prior to the 30% tax credit which makes it more affordable than a luxury roof of the same size. Also this product will eventually pay itself off and basically turn a profit on energy savings from then on. No other roofing products cover your energy cost, back up your home, or pay themselves off.

  • @KoRntech
    @KoRntech 4 місяці тому +6

    3:20 ya basically if youre a multimillionaire you too can have this setup, plan out a couple years while you live in your other mansion. Maybe next time Rick can bring himself down from the clouds and focus on a solar setup practical for the lower middle class and rheir under 160,000 home in or near the Ohio/Tennessee Valley.

  • @lesliewood3616
    @lesliewood3616 4 місяці тому +7

    Good video, it's a shame to see how much more it costs to retro fit an existing roof. You talk about roof does that include Tesla panels too.

  • @sbperformance5898
    @sbperformance5898 4 місяці тому +6

    I can't believe that solar is so expensive in US, I'm from Croatia (EU), mostly everything is cheaper in US then EU, especially in Cro. We dont have yet Tesla panels what i know, but i worked on houses with regular solars and its about 1000e per 1kw. Worked on 20kw solar power plant it cost 20000e but firm that sale it they do all documents, permits and even apply to EU subvention witch go to 80%, other then solar panels in same subventions go, heating pumps, batteries etc.

    • @flamaest
      @flamaest 4 місяці тому +1

      It's not, these quotes noted in the video are ridiculous and way too high.

  • @jorgecintron9674
    @jorgecintron9674 4 місяці тому +6

    Obvious clickbait title but I knew it would be good. From what I’ve seen lately, Tesla Solar roof has mainly been going on very expensive homes. It’s very expensive so I think they’re using the same approach as far as starting with the high end then eventually driving the cost lower. I don’t like cookie cutter style homes but it would be so much faster, easier and less expensive if all the roofs were the same in a neighborhood. Still, Solar roof is awesome.

    • @justinr9753
      @justinr9753 4 місяці тому

      Not clickbait. Watch launch event

    • @timboatfield
      @timboatfield 4 місяці тому

      100% intentional clickbait. What are you talking about!@@justinr9753

  • @JTDesign1
    @JTDesign1 3 місяці тому +1

    In a perfect world Ricky, you can design for that type of roof. As a designer I only have to keep that in the back of my mind as I'm working with my clients. My State (Washington) has a strict energy code that does have this carbon credit system which would allow near half the credits required, IF we add a solar roof. So it is coming or pushing against the tide of what residential design should look like. It is a notoriously slow industry to change.

  • @pip5461
    @pip5461 4 місяці тому +7

    Hardly "an epic failure"...!

  • @agrexias
    @agrexias 4 місяці тому +6

    While I'm enthusiastic about adopting solar energy, the current costs pose a significant barrier, especially considering my power consumption. A $150k solar solution seems excessively expensive, far surpassing the grid cost by a considerable margin. Both times I've consulted with solar contractors in my area to install a grid tie system, they have discouraged solar installation as a cost-saving measure. I hope in the future, we'll witness a significant decrease in the cost of solar solutions, making them more accessible to a broader audience. I'd love to be a customer

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому +1

      No one said you have to get a solar roof…. People have been installing affordable solar panels for quite awhile

    • @tedmcdaniel2951
      @tedmcdaniel2951 4 місяці тому +1

      The ROI on solar is so highly dependent on local utility rates, climate, orientation and design of your house, that "the cost of solar" is nearly meaningless. "The cost of solar for this specific house" is the better phrase. Moving to a different house may be the only way it works for you.
      The ROI worked for me out of dumb luck

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому

      @@tedmcdaniel2951you missed the biggest aspect. Rebates and Tax incentives…. Oh and, whether you do, and how much you get back from the utilities

    • @TylerFernandes94
      @TylerFernandes94 4 місяці тому

      solar contractors are discouraging solar installation? I think maybe they aren't really solar contractors then.. Did you mean to say your regular utility company discouraged you?

    • @cerealkilla4eva
      @cerealkilla4eva Місяць тому

      @@TylerFernandes94he stated they discouraged framing solar as solely a cost saving measure

  • @martman123456
    @martman123456 4 місяці тому +7

    My 11kw system in New Jersey cost me $33k installed with the electrical panel upgrade. I didn't do batteries because NJ does net metering and gives you credits if you grid-connect. Also at $10k per battery, adding batteries really extends the break-even date on solar installations. With tax credits, my system will pay itself off in 6 years. One battery would push that breakeven point to 9-10 years. I will hold out for a solid state battery if I'm going to put it on my house.

    • @patrickelliott2169
      @patrickelliott2169 4 місяці тому

      Only problem with net metering and a grid connection is that we already see energy companies, and their pet politicians, working to either undermine adoptions and/or find ways to make you pay in fees and taxes for being connected to said grid, instead of the other way around. And, they could also "require" you to be grid connected to install at all, if you do so via something like tax credits, or the like, thus forcing you to pay those fees. It's inevitable that energy companies will, at some point, become backup for your own power, or a source only for those that the solar can't scale to, like companies that use massive amounts of power, but there is no way in hades they will give up making hone owners pay through the nose somehow during that transition.
      Mind, currently something like the Tesla power walls has the same problem as electric cars- the biggest long term cost is replacing the batteries. So.. maybe a better bet wpuld be for energy companies to solve this issue by "renting" the batteries. Something like that, or a core exchange, like with lead acid batteries will have to happen soon, or the cost, both to anyone trying to adopt such, never mind, ironically, a whole new class of environmental damage, will also become inevitable, erasing all gains made by installing it in the first place.

    • @martman123456
      @martman123456 4 місяці тому

      @@patrickelliott2169 It depends on your state. New Jersey is a solid blue state and has green energy mandates in place for the power companies as well, and I think home solar counts toward the power company mandates, so my power company is encouraging solar adoption. There is a grid connection fee every month, but for me it's $5 per month. On Long Island, NY, its' $15 per month, but they have a similar program.

  • @ztechrepairs
    @ztechrepairs 4 місяці тому +16

    Great video. I don't think they're going to give up. They just really need to work on producing these at scale much more affordably. My neighbor just got a tesla solar roof. It looks awesome. Haven't gotten an update from them on how they like it they've only had it for a couple months. But I will definitely be interested in finding out

    • @AWESEM0
      @AWESEM0 4 місяці тому +6

      Elon always thinks in decades, might have a slow ramp up but it would make sense if they partnered up with more and more companies that build houses from scratch.. bound to happen

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому +3

      @@AWESEM0designing a house, with these panels in mind, would sure cut down the costs

  • @gamingbigfilipp
    @gamingbigfilipp 4 місяці тому +5

    if you pause on 1:00 youll see the drydock concrete wall is just sitting on dirt or whatever it is it should have been all the way down not like that

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko 4 місяці тому +8

    Tesla needs to have partnerships with new home and subdivision builders. It is more cost effective to put solar roof panels and a new roof and not have to spend labor to tear off and prep and old roof. Designing the home for solar make solar more cost effective.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому

      I mean, yes. But also, the tear down was already going to happen…. How many people are spending this much money, and tearing down a good roof? They are replacing their old roofs, so that cost was already going to happen anyways. And if you are tearing down a good roof, you CLEARLY don’t care about costs.

    • @KJSvitko
      @KJSvitko 4 місяці тому +1

      @@jamesbizs Extra labor cost for the tear off and prep of the old roof adds to the cost of the roof replacement. Much cheaper to do a new house. People are not tearing off good roofs.. They are getting solar when their old roof is near the end of its life expectancy and needs to be replaced anyway.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому

      @@KJSvitkothat’s literally what I said…. Tear off isn’t an EXTRA cost. It’s a cost that already had to happen, whether you do solar or not. I’m not sure why you’re even bringing it up, when you clearly understand and agree that no one is tearing off a good roof . Yet you still some who think tear down cost is a consideration? Compared to what?

    • @pablovial11
      @pablovial11 4 місяці тому +1

      Good Faith Energy works with architects and home builders to do just that. The challenge in Texas will be for the customer to make it clear to the architects and builders that that’s is what they are looking for as the earliest stages of the design process.

  • @TheKRUNKONE
    @TheKRUNKONE 4 місяці тому +4

    “Us Texans value our independence “ I was living in Texas when everything froze over and people were dying. The way the grid is built “independently “ in Texas guarantees that Texans are on their own in an emergency. Politicians left us high and dry too

    • @Alejandra-cv7rj
      @Alejandra-cv7rj 4 місяці тому

      Just keep a gas or propane generator on the side cost me 5,000. Also people depend too much on the government to take care of them that gets you killed.

    • @jason_farns
      @jason_farns 4 місяці тому +1

      Yep. Someone claiming the principle of independence as an end to itself is so short-sighted. We live in a complicated interconnected society and world in so many aspects. And we gain so much value and benefit from our interconnectedness.

    • @avsystem3142
      @avsystem3142 4 місяці тому

      Sure, Texans value independence, unless you are a pregnant woman.

    • @greghelton4668
      @greghelton4668 4 дні тому

      Did you vote for the people representing you?

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy 4 місяці тому +4

    I would deepen that pond because that reduces the water's heat, and hence evaporative loss. I would include swales or other rainwater harvesting structures made from onsite materials because hundred-year weather events happen.
    I prioritize resiliency and value-for-the-money rather than solving for one problem. I can relate to his POV.
    Good-to-know stuff without being annoying. I would like to install a bifacial solar panel roof over an oversized carport for my initial build.

    • @michaelsmithers4900
      @michaelsmithers4900 4 місяці тому +1

      Good stuff. Growing trees is supposed to help regulate water fluctuations better too. Permaculture builds up soil from leaf litter. This soil absorbs water better than dry hard sun baked soil. Increasing absorption and retention of water…

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 4 місяці тому

      @@michaelsmithers4900
      Agreed. I follow Brad Lancaster and am hoping bioswales become a bigger thing.

  • @lakecavanaugh
    @lakecavanaugh 4 місяці тому +4

    I agree with you that house design should enable solar. Unfortunately, with 80% of new developments ending up under the control of the 2-bit dictator system known as the "Homeowners Association", whose first and foremost goal is to prevent any possible non-traditional use of your property from occurring, you can forget this from ever happening.

    • @rosshoyt2030
      @rosshoyt2030 4 місяці тому +3

      Agreed but that's no reason to give up. People need to show up to homeowners association meetings or get involved in local politics where they can to start changing the policies.

  • @leroyharder4491
    @leroyharder4491 4 місяці тому +3

    I have often seen overly complicated roof designs on newer builds. Or roofs facing the wrong way. I object to them not only because of the difficulty for solar installs, but any shingle replacement is more expensive with extra labour needed with more potential for failure and water intrusion.
    Ironically, houses built prior to the 2000s are often better suited for solar. Our house has a huge south facing area. There is an 8.9 kw system on there now with room for another 6 kw as our electrical needs increase.
    It is possible to retrofit an older home for energy efficiency. My rental was made of 2 by 4 construction with cheap r12 insulation. Probably not even that. I first upgraded the siding which gave me another r5. Upgraded the windows at the same time. Whenever I upgrade a room I add a 2 by 2 on the studs making it 2 X 6. I can fill this space with roxul (r22). I then add 1 inch of foam which is also a vapour barrier (r5) and a thermal break. So go from r 8 or 12 to r32. I did this not only to save money, but also to make the house more comfortable. It was hot in the summer, cold in the winter.

  • @bentleybloodworth4282
    @bentleybloodworth4282 4 місяці тому +3

    A little off topic, with spay insulation how is it recycled once the house gets demolished or renovations are done? This would be a good topic to do a video on.

    • @cerealkilla4eva
      @cerealkilla4eva Місяць тому

      It’s not. If you’re looking for recyclable insulation you’d have to use EPS or other rigid foam. Spray foam has lots of drawbacks.

  • @dougsheldon5560
    @dougsheldon5560 4 місяці тому +2

    When I hear installation numbers like that I just tune out. Who can justify that wild estimate. I don't think those people have any real idea what it will actually cost.

  • @jmzorko
    @jmzorko 4 місяці тому +2

    I agree completely about updating the way we build homes, and Lou's desire for independence deeply resonates with me (as do the environmental and cost savings aspects). My solar system is only 7kw, though I've about 38kwh in battery storage. Even charging my EV, I generate slightly more than I consume over the entire year, but I _love_ being energy independent (for the majority of the time anyway). I hired Tesla to do the PV / battery system in my previous home, and they did a great job, but for this home I chose a more DIY approach for various reasons. The inverter I chose is the Sol-Ark 8k specifically for its off-grid and backup generator support, and it rocks.

  • @Nphen
    @Nphen 4 місяці тому +3

    Tesla already has their own construction crews at Giga Texas. The company should absolutely hire some architects to design modular housing made for solar roofs. If they want more employees in Sparks, Nevada, they need to build housing and offer it as a perk. Just like the Optimus team found they had to design their own actuators, Tesla Solar should have new home designs. Modular self-powered homes are another trillion dollar upcoming market.

  • @markumbers5362
    @markumbers5362 4 місяці тому +1

    How does the solar roof operate with part shade. Are there multiple micro inverters?

  • @louislesch3878
    @louislesch3878 4 місяці тому +1

    Why couldn’t a computer program be created that takes a 3D laser scan of any existing roof, finds the geometry, fills in the area as best as possible with energy producing panels and fills in the remainder with geometry of cut non producing tiles, exports that to a water jet table, and makes a bill of materials of the assembly? I’m pretty sure all of the necessary programming components already exist to do this right now.

  • @anteater2443
    @anteater2443 4 місяці тому +2

    How does the efficiency of Tesla solar compare to traditional solar? How does it compare to when the glass tiles first came out, and how does it compare to gaf timberline solar regarding cost durability efficiency? Good video but those are the questions I have.

    • @davidstewart1153
      @davidstewart1153 4 місяці тому

      GAF is nowhere near as hail resistant. Efficiency claims are close. The GAF system lays down right on the deck/waterproof barrier just like a shingle and they don't recommend an air gap or mesh. A lot of questions about how hot they get and does that hurt power production. I have the GAF system (10kW) and it doesn't seem to be a problem for me. Tesla has more air circulation. GAF has a nice looking warranty, untested by me. If you like apps, Tesla's is way better. My GAF system was maybe half the cost of Tesla, installed in one day, wired in another day, price didn't change. GAF has no social media presence that I see. I think it looks a little weird. Works for me. I was interested in Tesla but availability and price were big factors.

    • @laughinggas5281
      @laughinggas5281 3 місяці тому

      ​@@davidstewart1153just curious how much of that roof is the solar cell part? I've been wondering how good that GAF product is and haven't really found lots of reviews for it. Maybe you would like to do one:-). Or maybe get Ricky to do one!

    • @davidstewart1153
      @davidstewart1153 3 місяці тому

      @@laughinggas5281 About 60% of the total area for my installation. The GAF shingles are 5 feet wide and would work better on a simpler roof. Tesla tiles are easier to cram into complex roof shapes. GAF seems to market to roofers and let them sell the system, so there's no social media, influencer, referral codes etc.

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko 4 місяці тому +13

    All new homes need large 2 to 3 foot roof overhangs. This will help protect the doors, windows and siding from rain and water damage. Water intrusion is a buildings enemy and causes much damage every year.

    • @wraith600original1
      @wraith600original1 4 місяці тому +2

      good gutters do the same thing and better an overhang will only protect a small part of the wall unless the rain is vertical

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому

      @@wraith600original1gutters protect the foundation. That’s their main point. And no matter how good they are, enough rain and or wind, and it goes right over the gutter. And god forbid you don’t keep them constantly clean.

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 4 місяці тому

      The lower 1/3 to 2/3 of any house wall will get hit by rain and water spattered off the surrounding ground surface. This is why bricks are so good. They withstand the water and joints can be repointed every 100 years.

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 місяці тому

      I understand that, perspective is everything.

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 місяці тому

      @@davidelliott5843 or even modified formulas of otherwise typical masonary compounds. Places to put viable recycled materials to reduce Garbage Hill caused by mountains of less than multi platform lego adaptability within design that we not only see, we generate enabling more of it by not demanding meaningful defacto standards on a otherwise repairable only planet in our holdings.
      The things that should not be overlooked, or we get what we deserve by nobodies default than our own really.

  • @xiaoka
    @xiaoka 4 місяці тому +2

    Finally a clickbait title that is kind of true. 😂

  • @lordinquis8r679
    @lordinquis8r679 4 місяці тому +2

    Thanks, Ricky! I’m not offended by the title of your post. I’ve been wondering about this very issue. I clicked it first thing.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому +1

      Glad to hear it! I changed it… Tesla fans can get so sensitive. I love this thing… but there’s a story here! Cheers Sir!

  • @Mr2Reviews
    @Mr2Reviews 4 місяці тому +1

    I'm hoping Tesla collaborates with other factory manufactured homes like Boxabl, Cover, and Abodu and maybe even RVs like the Lightship, PebbleFlow, and Northern Lites.

  • @sabret00the
    @sabret00the 4 місяці тому +3

    The click bait title is really disappointing. I expect more of this channel

  • @christinearmington
    @christinearmington 4 місяці тому

    I had a contract to install back in 2020. The company installed two Tesla roofs and then stopped. The price was high but so was Tesla stock. 2023 I found another, bigger company and was really excited about moving forward. The price - pretty much double. So I’m going with panels and powerwalls.

  • @zangarkhan
    @zangarkhan 4 місяці тому +1

    That level of spray foam I think they need a full fire mitigation system Or place rock wool over everything. I would be terrified a small spark catching. Stuff goes up like napalm.

  • @GunGrave0
    @GunGrave0 4 місяці тому +3

    False advertising with title. Didn’t see any mention of failure

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому

      It’s been a total commercial flop… what do you mean?

  • @document6
    @document6 4 місяці тому +1

    It’s worth noting the cost of a regular roof in the math bc the Tesla roof saves you the cost of a roof as well! Great vid!

  • @markumbers5362
    @markumbers5362 4 місяці тому +2

    I don't know why solar is so expensive in the U.S.. I am in Sydney Australia. I just put in 6.5. kw of Q panels and a 5kw Fronius inverter for $8kAustralian ( about $5,500 U.S.). It generates an average of 25 kwhs per day.

    • @fredsnit5699
      @fredsnit5699 4 місяці тому +1

      Exactly. Installers here a robbing homeowners. The panels racking balance of system and inverter should be less than $2 per watt installed

  • @christinearmington
    @christinearmington 4 місяці тому

    In Florida I received a discount on insurance for the opposite type of roof. Lots of hips and valleys. I guess it makes it harder for hurricanes to peel them off.

  • @tbix1963
    @tbix1963 4 місяці тому +5

    From everything I’ve heard the real problem with Tesla roofs were incomplete installations. My sister put up the big bucks for a system on her existing house in the Boston area. They installed the panels and left without finalizing the installation. She was forced to wait several years for them to come back and finish the installation. The installer had gotten paid for the roof. She had to wait for the electric to be finished and without that there is no payback and the low profits on that section left no incentive to the installer to come back. In retrospect I’m sure she would have had the contract written differently, just saying buyer beware and read the fine print.

    • @eyesuckle
      @eyesuckle 4 місяці тому +4

      Hunh. A contractor who leaves enormous gaps in the job timeline while they pursue other work, screwing their existing clients. Never heard of that happening before.

    • @shonunezekiel
      @shonunezekiel 4 місяці тому

      @@eyesuckle right - that is why you can pay the contractor 100% upfront, rather than keep some back until the project completes ;-)

    • @eugeniustheodidactus8890
      @eugeniustheodidactus8890 4 місяці тому

      That totally sks ! Who's brilliant idea was it to pay the roofer before installation was complete?

  • @christopherguy1217
    @christopherguy1217 4 місяці тому +2

    $50,000 above the cost for standard panels is a crazy price premium. If it was $10,000 I'd start to entertain the idea but really I think that the price is a major barrier.

    • @MGiosparky
      @MGiosparky 4 місяці тому +1

      Agreed! As an installer and electrician, I can’t believe what people pay for these Tesla roof tiles. Freaking nuts!! That guy should have a sweet ground mount or outdoor covered space with panels.

    • @fredsnit5699
      @fredsnit5699 4 місяці тому +1

      @@MGiosparky yep. Never pay more than $2/watt installed or you’re getting robbed

  • @michaelsmithers4900
    @michaelsmithers4900 4 місяці тому

    I think when they spray foam the attic like that - it is considered part of the conditioned envelope even if not directly conditioned.
    It would be interesting to put a heat pump water heater in that attic and see what the ambient temperatures are…

  • @Dan-sOB13
    @Dan-sOB13 4 місяці тому

    Your Videos are always great.

  • @batgele2796
    @batgele2796 4 місяці тому +3

    how do the financials look for this install? how many years to pay off? looks great but expensive.

    • @pablovial11
      @pablovial11 4 місяці тому

      Without solar, the energy on this house would probably cost about $6K-$10K/yr. Let’s call it $8K. After the 30% tax credit, you’re looking at $100K. So +/-12 years?
      The other thing to think about is that this roof will never have to be replaced again which would eliminate any insurance claims for roofing replacements. Now it’s less than 12 years.
      Is there any other roofing product that has an ROI?

    • @batgele2796
      @batgele2796 4 місяці тому +1

      @@pablovial11 thanks for the reply. doesn’t 8K seem high though? i live in 3300 sq ft in minnesota and average about $3K/year.

  • @robertstout7756
    @robertstout7756 3 місяці тому

    It does get South and West shading from those trees that are fairly close. Depending on the system, a small percentage of shading can greatly reduce the solar collection.

  • @Livecompletely
    @Livecompletely 4 місяці тому +2

    Great intentional design. However, solar will not cover you entire energy usage during winter months unless you 3-5x the system size. Works great on high irradiance days but solar will not be a single source of off-grid power during all months of the year without drastically oversizing your system, defeating the ROI term.

  • @rmkep
    @rmkep 4 місяці тому

    The Title was a little "click baitey" but the content very good. Like you, I installed a 12.4 Kw Solar Panel, 2 Powerwall system on my very complex tile roof and I agree all new housing being built should use smart energy design. My Tesla solar panel system has been fantastic and is paying itself off over the 10 year Tesla Purchase ($49K at 1.9% interest rate). I am replacing all of the house appliances and going electric as they age out. Since the house and the dual HVAC are 24 years old we will be doing a Heat Pump based replacement on that which will eliminate all of my need for natural gas. That will be the last piece of my true off grid energy independence. I'm hoping that Tesla builds a residential heat pump system so that all of my energy consuming and generating systems can be controlled by a single application and I believe that good comprehensive data is an important aspect of true energy independence. The Tesla software provides that.
    Rather than more powerwalls, my plan is to use our 2 EV's as a storage resource for the overall home energy and so bi-directional charging (vehicle to home) will be a factor in all of my EV purchases in the future. Keep up the good work Ricky ... 👍

  • @JorenMathews
    @JorenMathews Місяць тому

    How much are the panels themselves per square foot? It looks trivial to install oneself, and I wonder how much you could save.

  • @adamackels73
    @adamackels73 4 місяці тому

    I cashed a roofer about my roof about 3 years ago. I have an old home - built 1926. It was $50k for the roof, and a single Powerwall. I did Euroshield instead, even that was $25k.

  • @proberts34
    @proberts34 4 місяці тому +1

    Sorry, but I think I missed something. In what way is the "Tesla Solar Glass Roof Is an EPIC Failure"?
    Aside from high installation costs for complicated roofs, this seemed like a very positive assessment.

  • @bigbearbear5458
    @bigbearbear5458 4 місяці тому +1

    You can retrofit your current traditional vented attic into a conditioned space by sealing it up with spray foam, I've done it in my current property. When it was built, it had a vented attic and the problem with this design is that not only is it not energy efficient, it was letting bugs in and also causing issues with truss uplifting that resulting in cracking on walls and doors not closing properly during certain season. I had a contractor come in and seal off the attic with spray foam and all those problems go away.
    One thing you will want to consider is that you don't have to use spray foam for the entire insulation. It can be a lot cheaper to have them use spray foam to seal up the attic first, then have batts attached behind the foam secured using twine. You will get the same resulting R value for insulation and it'll be a lot cheaper.

  • @peeperpawsmcgee
    @peeperpawsmcgee 4 місяці тому +1

    Wow that view of your house has me as a homebhowner thinking wow like all of modern media out of touch. Who can afford this? 85% of people have mo idea what b you are pitching

  • @JCKR-yv4gy
    @JCKR-yv4gy 4 місяці тому

    I never thought Two Bit... would go the click-bait route.

  • @alancadorette3447
    @alancadorette3447 4 місяці тому +1

    that tree in the front is going to be an issue when it grows another foot or 2

  • @johndonovan7897
    @johndonovan7897 4 місяці тому

    The Tesla solar roof quote for my house was $228K for about 13 KW and 3 powerwalls. I think my roof was more complicated than yours! I'm hoping their prices will drop a bit in the future...

  • @imscanon
    @imscanon 4 місяці тому

    I'm hoping to build a house and would love to have a Tesla roof on it.
    Advice please. I need 15kwh a day to power for power outages that can last from a couple hours to a few days. I'm in Michigan so my solar hours is 4.48, 1,278 Kwh per 1Kw, says need 4.24 Kwh array
    I'm looking at a 400w, 36v panel, says output DC 39V, 10.25a max, transfer efficiency greater or equal to 21%
    A MPPT Charge controller of 100a, says 12/24/36/48v Auto, Max Input 100v. Max charging current 100a. Max Input volts of panels should be 30v-45v (for 24v battery). Max Input power of panels should be 2000w. Output voltage DC5v/1.5a
    Inverter of 4000w/8000w Peak, Pure Sine Wave Power Inverter, DC24v-AC110
    And Battery is LiTime 24v 100Ah, LifeP04 Lithium Ion, Build-in 100a BMS, 2,560 Wh Energy. Up to 4P2S (don't know what that means) 48v battery 400Ah of 20.48 Kwh
    It's only 1000sq' apartment, 2bd/2ba. Old Kenmore Fridge, elec range, micro, dishwasher (which I'd forgo during an outage), a couple computers and tvs, wifi, lights, a mini-fridge, that's about it. No washer/dryer and if I did use my hair dryer, it's 5 mins or less, but I don't use it every day (and my housemate is bald). For obvs. reasons I wanna keep the heat on and the fridge. We'd unplug things we don't need for a few days, but I'll stick with what we've averaged over the last year anyway just to be safe at the 15Kwh a day.
    Am I on the right track here? Too much, too little, just right? Any part of this not work with another or could be downgraded or done better/easier/cheaper? Any part of it I don't need? Anything I do that's not here? Thanks for your time!

  • @skyearthocean5815
    @skyearthocean5815 4 місяці тому

    I think an added advantage of a single slope is that it's easier to run the rainwater into a cistern for water collection.

  • @polarbearigloo
    @polarbearigloo 4 місяці тому

    yeah simplicity is needed and the price as much as a small home in some states does not help

  • @b.griffin317
    @b.griffin317 4 місяці тому

    For a moment I almost thought Ricky was moving. 😂

  • @randydutton1
    @randydutton1 4 місяці тому

    Apply GMG's Thermal-XR onto the A/C elements and the efficiency would greatly improved.

  • @mariomenezes1153
    @mariomenezes1153 4 місяці тому

    Brilliant. Thanks!

  • @MickyELee
    @MickyELee 4 місяці тому +1

    What is the optimal roof tilt in the US mid-latitudes?

    • @csf1757
      @csf1757 3 місяці тому

      Rule of thumb is roof tilt optimally same as your latitude

  • @tui_jr_510
    @tui_jr_510 3 місяці тому

    Ricky, would love to see a review from you on the GAF timberline solar shingle product

  • @stevenlove200
    @stevenlove200 3 місяці тому

    My wife and I are in the process of building a new home. It will be a shed roof and there will be solar exposure. So this Tesla roof may be the ticket. But I wonder about how they handle necessary protrusions like plumbing vents, etc. We also have not been able to get a reply from Tesla regarding doing a project in our area. Union, Washington

  • @andyfeimsternfei8408
    @andyfeimsternfei8408 4 місяці тому +2

    Lots of problems with blown foam insulation.

    • @billnoname8093
      @billnoname8093 4 місяці тому +1

      mold, rot, gas off, lack of breathing in general. I could go on but I won't, lol

  • @xiaowei1
    @xiaowei1 4 місяці тому

    Solar seems to be very expensive in the US. In Australia, I put in 13.2kw of solar on our roof which cost about $8,000 (AU), this includes the inverters (2 x 5kw inverters) and installation cost. We have a subsidy scheme, but it's fading away year by year as the rebate scheme decreases. The market is so mature we pretty much don't need it anymore. Without the rebate, I would have paid about an additional $4,500 (AU), being $12,500 (AU) in total; which is about $8,396.25 (US). There is so much competition in the US, I would have expected even better prices.

  • @katiegreene3960
    @katiegreene3960 4 місяці тому

    The tesla tiles and the clips on the back remind me of a automotive plastic panel ....similar clips

  • @arnoldammann9530
    @arnoldammann9530 4 місяці тому

    Great video. Kind of an inaccurate title for the positive review... Ricky makes some very important points: the best roof is one flat plane, angled to the south, with no vents poking through. Stop making home roofs that are shaped like two origami swans mating! The modern style designs look better than the McMansion style that seems to be the only thing big housing developers can do. I would love to see Tesla take there solar products to the next level: a modular roof panel that has everything: structural roof, insulation, glass solar tiles, power wall inside the panel. These should be big panels, maybe four would cover the entire house. A truck shows up with four panels, a crane places them on top of the walls, plug the connectors into the house wiring - done.

  • @GntlTch
    @GntlTch 23 дні тому

    "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" but for this beholder, that architecture is far from beautiful.

  • @calvincheney7405
    @calvincheney7405 4 місяці тому +1

    The price point is 3x what it should be... They said leasing, or paying over time would make these affordable. I have 21+ square & it is more than the value of my home to put this on... Impossible~

  • @kida12
    @kida12 4 місяці тому +1

    I thought I read they were using them on new builds somewhere. That seemed to be more economical for everyone in the long run.

  • @zenden8030
    @zenden8030 4 місяці тому

    Random question to who may know... This might be a dumb question, I might be a little confused ha Say you have well water: the submersible pump brings it to the pressure tank, pressure tank through the filters you have/need, then the cold water is ready for use. There's a line that diverts off to the hot water heater and the cold water heads down the dip tube and heats up, so far correct? the question is the hot water in the water heater still pressurized by the pressure tank or is there some sort of pump that the heater has?

    • @tectalabyss
      @tectalabyss 4 місяці тому +1

      Not that I am aware of. The pump pressure is what delivers water to the whole house. Now you can buy another pump to up the pressure ,between the pressure tank and your home. Hope this helps.

    • @mikefochtman7164
      @mikefochtman7164 4 місяці тому +1

      Typically the pressure tank provides the motive pressure for the whole home. It 'pushes' the hot water through the water heater to your taps as well as the cold water directly from the pressure tank to your taps. Hope this helps.

  • @jamesnotsmith1465
    @jamesnotsmith1465 4 місяці тому

    What are other countries doing that is different from the approach in the USA?

  • @jameskitzmann6268
    @jameskitzmann6268 4 місяці тому +1

    The Texas grid would be just fine if we disconnect the windmills that do not put out reliable amounts of power and make it a slow process of firing up a natural gas power plant to take the load.

  • @nextjin
    @nextjin 2 місяці тому

    The only thing this video made me realize is that on a new home build trying to buy a 25kw solar roof setup would be WAY out of reach. That is insane that his cost that much with that simple a setup.

  • @zenden8030
    @zenden8030 4 місяці тому

    Is a 9/12 pitch too steep for a solar roof? What is ideal pitch/degree?

    • @eyesuckle
      @eyesuckle 4 місяці тому

      I would supply your latitude if you want a good answer to this question.

  • @sspyder181
    @sspyder181 4 місяці тому +3

    I built 3 43kwh lfp powerwalls, all 300amp output 840ah each! Guess what, it cost me under 100$ a kwh. Its getting mad cheap.

    • @mr.makeit4037
      @mr.makeit4037 4 місяці тому +1

      Wait til everyone wants to do what you did. And it's coming. Big time price increase and worldwide minerals constraints for solar manufacturing. And don't forget fossil energy creates this, which is peaking now.

    • @kissthesky40
      @kissthesky40 4 місяці тому

      @@mr.makeit4037
      Drill, drill, drill.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому

      @@mr.makeit4037solar? Lol wait until governments force every company to do battery tech. I think they said, that if the UK goes through with all electric by the 2035 date, they’d use the entire worlds supply…. Just the UK. Based on todays numbers. There’s no way these people are this dumb. Many of them are much smarter than me, yet I can clearly see it. So why are these things still happen? It makes no sense. Ignorance? Malice? Both?

    • @mr.makeit4037
      @mr.makeit4037 4 місяці тому

      @kissthesky40 did you know that incentives for drilling investments are going down because of the interests in new energy technologies. Ofcourse what society doesn't understand is that fossil energy is the driver of these new technologies in manufacturing .
      Also here in Texas new drilling and fracking is so close to other existing wells that what's produced is less and of poor quality. Drilling in new areas also like the artic will prove to be extremely expensive and possibly not feasible in terms of energy return on investment.

  • @brianhunter1410
    @brianhunter1410 14 днів тому

    Think of combining a passive solar greenhouse as a basement with a building above it with solar roof tiles. Electricity and heat all year round.

  • @mikegrok
    @mikegrok 17 днів тому

    If you fully bundle and get the largest system to knock down your bill to the best price per watt, it is $2.10 per watt. Otherwise it is $4.65 per watt.
    If I go to signaturesolar and get panels they will cost $0.25 per watt.
    The semi-premium inverters are $0.25 per watt.
    Solar is much easier to justify if you are not over paying for your hardware by 4x to 20x.

  • @KoRntech
    @KoRntech 4 місяці тому +1

    Gees Rick you couldnt point out that the owner didnt want ro rely on ERCOT becuse Texas isnt part of the US grid they have their own privitized grid to totally not maximize profits.

  • @giansolomon
    @giansolomon 4 місяці тому

    Ricky, did the quoted cost reflect the 30% IRA deduction?
    $120k for a monster sized durable roof + 17kwh solar + 4(!) Tesla PW battery storage is compelling for Premium homes.

  • @DQ-su6qf
    @DQ-su6qf 4 місяці тому

    35 years in the Industry…The elimination of all cutting of solar tiles was needed.
    Start with ‘’New Construction Only’’
    1. Produce about 3 continuous sizes, example: 6’ 10’. 14’.
    2. Mandate contractors build houses in sections to those exact sizes.
    3. Channel all pipes ect. in attic to 1 or more decorative fireplaces with hinged tops for access.
    4. Optional application would be VERTICAL for allowing different lengths & heights of given sections. This mimics standing seam metal roofs.
    Any competent roofing crew could prep the roof beforehand hand & finish any roof up to approximately 5,000 in 1 day.
    -“Some’’ Existing houses could be converted by construction companies to channel pipes through Attic to false chimneys & re configure roof..

  • @sven2022-wb7wc
    @sven2022-wb7wc 2 місяці тому

    why not usimg the hot Air for a Heatpump?
    So you generate a Airstream that cooling the Roof abd your Heatpump have more Effizienz.

  • @deschurk6852
    @deschurk6852 4 місяці тому +6

    how is this an epic failure? a typical thing of CLICKBAIT...
    For the rest it's a nice video, pretty interesting.

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs 4 місяці тому +2

      Better than most of his other clock bait titles. It’s literally all he and many other creators like him are capable of doing. Literally every single thing ever, is ground breaking or revolutionary or insert another overused phrase

    • @timboatfield
      @timboatfield 4 місяці тому +3

      Won't be log till i'm triggered in to a protest unsub then. I'm sure I was subbed here previously, but it's been so long I've forgotten. I can't remember why i unsubbed previously.@@jamesbizs

  • @zhirsr
    @zhirsr 4 місяці тому

    Is the homeowner using propane for HVAC? or just for the generators. You mentioned two propane tanks in the video

    • @TheUweRoss
      @TheUweRoss 4 місяці тому

      You'd be shocked how fast a good-sized standby generator will go through propane.

  • @iancowan3527
    @iancowan3527 4 місяці тому +1

    That's a terrible home location! Literally built within a flood plan? I'd put money on it being within 500y!

  • @TheAdeybob
    @TheAdeybob 4 місяці тому +1

    encouraging people to install solar panels is good...but painting tesla out as the answer..? Uncomfortably not good, especially when you can just mount affordable panels pretty much anywhere you want.
    The best thing about this roof-tile idea, is that if it's any good, it'll be copied and made available at a decent price. If it hasn't been copied, then it'll likely never be owt but niche, but I guess will be pretty good for bragging rights for some time to come.
    I hope you get a free roof out of it tho...you worked hard enough for it.

  • @sparkybob1023
    @sparkybob1023 4 місяці тому

    Good job 👍🏼

  • @vinumcopia9850
    @vinumcopia9850 4 місяці тому

    IMO, a single plane roof with no protrusion is actual ideal for regular solar panels. The panels can be installed in the exact center of the roof to enhance the aesthetics. The fact that it would be much less expensive just makes it a no-brainer to me.

  • @Mike-tf6sc
    @Mike-tf6sc 4 місяці тому

    LMAO, "lets take a stroll on our solar panels, don't worry about microcracks or stress fractures"

  • @jonwatkins254
    @jonwatkins254 4 місяці тому

    The urethane foam was not applied in a remotely uniform manner. The brief spray installation demonstration showed no attempt to fill the wall pocket corners first, and left a visible void at the bottom of the wall. . A good operator using application equipment like Grayco brand and 2 pound per cubic foot high lift foam can fill 2x6 wall cavities in 2 pases with a much smoother job.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  4 місяці тому

      That’s the attic an unconditioned space

  • @coorbin
    @coorbin 4 місяці тому

    I've had a Tesla solar roof since 2019, with panels made in New York and 2 x 3rd gen Powerwalls. We've had no physical problems with the system, only some software issues with the solar inverter that were solved after a firmware update obtained from the inverter manufacturer and installed by a Tesla employee. The only negative aspect I have, upon reflection, is that we get quite a bit less energy from the roof than we thought. It's about 30% less than the estimates Tesla gave us. I guess, if you want to go with a system like this, don't worry about things like roof leaks, that shouldn't happen. But you're going to be disappointed if you expect to get ALL of the kilowatts as stated in your contract, even on a perfectly sunny day at noon on the longest day of the year. The solar we get is still useful, but if we ever end up disconnected from the grid for an extended outage, we will only be able to power our refrigerator and microwave off of the solar, and charge our phones. No computers, TV, washer, dryer, dishwasher, HVAC - they use too much energy.

  • @randallstephens1680
    @randallstephens1680 4 місяці тому

    When was this filmed?

    • @pablovial11
      @pablovial11 4 місяці тому

      Summer. 115 degrees outside 😅

  • @1winlock
    @1winlock 4 місяці тому

    It may be rummer, I've heard that the tesla glass roof tiles loose power on high temperature days. Can you are Tesla confirm this?

    • @pablovial11
      @pablovial11 4 місяці тому

      Trust me, we get a lot of high temperature days in Texas. They don’t lose power. All solar PV is less efficient with excessive heat, but it doesn’t lose power.

  • @WilliamLHart
    @WilliamLHart 4 місяці тому +2

    Your video title is CLICKBAIT. Sad because your content is good. You do not resort to clickbait .