Thanks so much for all the info!
REFERRALS ANYONE?
Anyone have referrals for good local solar installers/contractors? We talked to SolarMax but looking for others to comparison shop.
TIPS
Here's some good info I've been able to find that I thought be useful for others.
GO BACK TO SCHOOL
We attended the SCE Solar Class, definitely suggest it for anyone looking for intro solar information. They have both webinars and meet and greet with local installers. Have the ppt if anyone wants to see it, some good info.
https://www.sce.com/wps/portal/home/business/news-events/solar-classes/
INCENTIVES
There's two main incentives right now:
1) CA Solar Initiative which comes as a SCE Rebate, note they are in the last step (step 10) so funds are running out and the rebate is at .20 per watt (calculator here:
http://www.csi-epbb.com/)
2) Fed Tax Credit of 30% of net cost (minus CSI SCE Rebate) (http://www.dsireusa.org/incentives/incentive.cfm?Incentive_Code=US37F). Ends 12/31/2016.
Of the two Federal is the biggest one as CSI is at the last step so the incentives are small but high it's a rebate and can cover a couple months of electricity so still not bad

. But not sure if the CSI rebate is so significant to RUSH into solar just to get the rebate before it runs out. Need to do the math.
SCE kind of gave a guideline of $150 energy bill where solar makes sense, below that they say there are other SCE Home Upgrade Energy Incentives that are more efficient.
Another strategy is to phase it in and not try to completely offset your whole bill only get rid of Tier 3 and Tier 4.
The CSI program only allows a homeowners to max out based on their last 12 months, however for new home owners you can use a 2watt/sqft guideline.
But that's really aggressive. With that guideline I had a vendor push for a 9.2KW system! Which is pretty nuts as our first two electric bills since we moved in have been around $100, although this month likely to hit $150 with the summer weather.
DOESN'T PAY TO BE A MINI-SOLAR PLANT
With new construction you can totally max out and whatever excess power you sell back but it's a VERY BAD ROI. You only sell back at 3 or 4 cents depending on current spot prices. Pretty ridiculous since you pay at LEAST 12 cents for the same power. So the ROI math (and there calculators to help) really only make sense to minimize/eliminate your bill and not try to build out your own power plant

.
RESOURCES
As mentioned above the Go Solar CA site has lots of good info, other resources I found good:
SCE Solar Class:
https://www.sce.com/wps/portal/home/business/news-events/solar-classes/
Solar Panel Talk Forum:
http://www.solarpaneltalk.com
Clean Power Estimator:
http://www.gosolarcalifornia.org/tools/clean_power_estimator.php
Other Calculators (first two already mentioned above):
http://www.gosolarcalifornia.org/tools/calculators.php
Bid Comparison Sheet:
https://www.sce.com/wps/wcm/connect...60bbc7/BidComparisonWorksheet.pdf?MOD=AJPERES
Price Per Watt To Expect to Pay:
http://www.californiasolarstatistics.com/reports/quarterly_cost_per_watt/
SCE Price Tiers are:
Tier 1 ($.12): 0-100% of Base
Tier 2 ($.16): 101%-130% of Base
Tier 3 ($.27): 131%-200% of Base
Tier 4 ($.31): 201%+ of Base
The Base is different for everyone and also seasons (summer vs winter). You can find out your specific KWh breakpoints when you log into MyAccount on mySCE. Look under your bill and where it says projected bill. Under there is a link for "How is this calculated" it will show your KWh break-points. Useful if you're trying to estimate how KWHr you need to generate to move to a lower tier.