Contact ABC Solar

Tell us what the system has to do.

Solar Ballet starts with the real goal: backup power, lower utility exposure, critical loads, off-grid performance, commercial resilience, or a cleaner solar design that looks as serious as it performs.

Start the conversation

Bring the load list, the bill, and the blackout fear.

The right solar battery design depends on the property, the utility bill, the roof, the electrical equipment, the owner’s goals, and the circuits that must keep working when the grid fails.

  • Home solar and battery backup
  • Commercial solar and resilience planning
  • Critical-load and protected-circuit review
  • Off-grid and deep backup performance questions
  • Equipment placement and beautiful solar design
  • Future expansion planning for batteries, EVs, and electric loads

Before you call

The useful information.

You do not need a perfect package. But these items help turn a vague solar conversation into a practical design review.

01

Utility bill

A recent electric bill helps show usage, rate structure, utility account context, and the scale of the energy problem.

02

Backup priorities

List what must keep running: refrigerator, freezer, internet, lights, garage door, medical equipment, office, security, or comfort loads.

03

Electrical photos

Photos of the main electrical panel, meter area, subpanels, possible battery location, and roof access can speed up the first review.

04

Roof or site notes

Shade, roof age, roof type, available space, access issues, and preferred equipment locations all affect the design.

05

Outage expectation

A few hours, overnight, or extended backup are different design problems. Say what you want the system to survive.

06

Future loads

EV charging, heat pumps, mini-splits, electric cooking, shop equipment, or added batteries should be discussed early.

Send a clear request

Use this format.

Copy this into an email and add what you know. Short is fine. Useful is better.

Item What to include
Property Address, home or business, roof type if known
Goal Savings, backup, off-grid, commercial resilience, or design cleanup
Critical loads What must stay powered during an outage
Utility bill Attach a recent bill if available
Photos Main panel, meter, roof, battery/inverter location

The first design question

What does success look like when the grid goes down?

That answer changes everything. A refrigerator and modem backup is one design. A whole-home comfort system is another. A commercial site with refrigeration, point-of-sale, and security is another.

  • Do you want essential-load backup or broader coverage?
  • Do you need solar recharge during an outage?
  • Do you want to reduce utility exposure during expensive hours?
  • Do you need battery expansion later?
  • Do you care how the equipment wall looks? You should.

No mystery quote

The system should be designed around the job.

Solar Ballet is not about guessing at a package. It is about understanding the performance: production, storage, inverter behavior, protected loads, equipment placement, utility exposure, and owner expectations.

Contact ABC Solar with the real problem. The design should follow from there.

Book the sun

Call, email, or start with the question that matters.

What has to keep working when the grid stops? Answer that first, and the solar battery design becomes much more honest.