I've used treated wood to make solar water heater frames with some success. I used treated wood sleepers on the roof, covered them with aluminum flashing to keep the sun and some of the moisture out, and then used aluminum struts to support the panels at an angle. Hardware is all stainless steel fasteners, with some aluminum tubing and aluminum panel feet.
What do people think about such a system for solar electric panels? Pluses: treated wood is inexpensive and easy to work with. Covered with aluminum (I used prepainted aluminum fascia, then painted it to match the roof) it should have a long life.
I've got to build racks at a different angle than the roof, it's only a 4:12 (19 degrees) and I need more like 38 degrees or so. I'll probably make it adjustable, and use a steep angle in the winter, a shallow angle int he summer. Unirack doesn't seem to have a simple way to do much but mount flat. is this true?
What do people think of this idea? Nuts? Sound?
What do people think about such a system for solar electric panels? Pluses: treated wood is inexpensive and easy to work with. Covered with aluminum (I used prepainted aluminum fascia, then painted it to match the roof) it should have a long life.
I've got to build racks at a different angle than the roof, it's only a 4:12 (19 degrees) and I need more like 38 degrees or so. I'll probably make it adjustable, and use a steep angle in the winter, a shallow angle int he summer. Unirack doesn't seem to have a simple way to do much but mount flat. is this true?
What do people think of this idea? Nuts? Sound?
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