I use about 550KWh per month and my last bill was around $225.
I learned that I can change generation providers, which I need to do, but I still have to pay the absurd transmission fees. I also have Solar City coming at the end of summer to do a site survey to see if I am sited correctly for panels which cover my typical monthly usage. ROI on the panels is ~12 years if I purchase them, or I can try one of their lease programs in which I pay a fixed KW/h rate + a fee to Solar City for 15 years (and then own the panels).
I do find it interesting that I went the complete opposite direction as you. I have a low power Mac Mini running a VM as my server, and nothing centrally distributed - Sonos devices which can be shut off at the outlet, Tivo Mini's which can be shut off at the outlet, TV's which can be shut off at the outlet, etc ... I also wired my lights to be always on and put in smart bulbs, which has the benefit of not drawing any power for the switches (although that's not the primary reason I went this way). All lights are already switched over to LED, and our primary computers are laptops. There are a few things that are always on, like the Dropcams, Hue bridge, etc that can't be easily shut down. My quest for reducing consumption is also what is preventing me from buying a NAS device like a Synology/qNAP and instead using USB 3.0 powered external 2TB drives
I really want to get the Brultech installed so I can start to see where I can save power, but I have a feeling it will all be in the A/C and refrigerator. The other biggies like heat/hot water are gas. The only thing I can do with the AC is keep the house warmer, which I have been trying to do (76/78), but it really sucks since it's been in the mid 90's. If I can get my usage down to 300KW/h, which I think is doable, then installing solar makes perfect sense. But I need to learn exactly what the draw of my big ticket users really are.
I learned that I can change generation providers, which I need to do, but I still have to pay the absurd transmission fees. I also have Solar City coming at the end of summer to do a site survey to see if I am sited correctly for panels which cover my typical monthly usage. ROI on the panels is ~12 years if I purchase them, or I can try one of their lease programs in which I pay a fixed KW/h rate + a fee to Solar City for 15 years (and then own the panels).
I do find it interesting that I went the complete opposite direction as you. I have a low power Mac Mini running a VM as my server, and nothing centrally distributed - Sonos devices which can be shut off at the outlet, Tivo Mini's which can be shut off at the outlet, TV's which can be shut off at the outlet, etc ... I also wired my lights to be always on and put in smart bulbs, which has the benefit of not drawing any power for the switches (although that's not the primary reason I went this way). All lights are already switched over to LED, and our primary computers are laptops. There are a few things that are always on, like the Dropcams, Hue bridge, etc that can't be easily shut down. My quest for reducing consumption is also what is preventing me from buying a NAS device like a Synology/qNAP and instead using USB 3.0 powered external 2TB drives
I really want to get the Brultech installed so I can start to see where I can save power, but I have a feeling it will all be in the A/C and refrigerator. The other biggies like heat/hot water are gas. The only thing I can do with the AC is keep the house warmer, which I have been trying to do (76/78), but it really sucks since it's been in the mid 90's. If I can get my usage down to 300KW/h, which I think is doable, then installing solar makes perfect sense. But I need to learn exactly what the draw of my big ticket users really are.