I recently was looking at replacing our solar hot water for the exact same reasons, but instead I did some checks, spent $110 dollars, and now have hot water in the morning.
This will only be relevant if your house was plumbed after tempering valves were mandated.
What is a tempering valve you ask ? well there are 2 conflicting laws that apply to hot water. Stored hot water must be maintained at above 60 degrees to kill legionella bacteria, but by law can not be supplied to a tap used for bathing above 50 degrees (45 for childcare centres / nursing homes etc), so a tempering valve is plumbed into the water line that feeds the bathrooms. The tempering valve is a 3 way mixer that that has a hot in, cold in, and mixed warm out. It has a valve that works like a car thermostat, and they have about a 10 year lifespan.
in the morning, check the temperature of the hot water at your kitchen tap (which should be direct from the solar system), and then check the temperature at the shower (which will be via the tempering valve). If the kitchen is hotter than the bath, chances are the tempering valve is cactus. $110 from the hardware (make sure you get one rated for solar) should fix it.
If both the kitchen and bath are the same, then you will need to consider other heating options like using the booster. You could try having the solar system serviced which will involve cleaning the panels, changing the glycol, and checking the thermostat. That will cost you about $300.
Hope the info is of some use.