I'm wondering if I should have my installers move some stuff around or not. Here is what is going on.
I have Trina Solar smart modules. 22x300 Watt panels and a Fronius Primo 6.0.1 Inverter. Panels are 72 cell instead of 60, total of 6600 watts and they have Tigo optimizers on them from the factory. I wanted to input from experts so I'm posting in this forum. The panels are laid out on 3 different sections of my roof. They were supposed to split them into two strings of 11 ea, they ended up going with 3 strings, 7 7 and 8. Anyhow one of the strings extends into a panel on a different section of my roof and at a different tilt and that panel hasn't been producing well at all. It seems like it is limited by the string it is attached to, as that section is shaded until afternoon. Here is a screenshot from my tigo monitoring pg you can see the top right panel of the left side section is under producing.
You can kind of tell just by looking at them. The 7 on the right side face south and produce great. The others are at a SW orientation and produce pretty good. The 6 in the middle are along the ridge of my roof. You can see my house is the background of the Tigo screenshot so you can see how they are laid out. The 9 on the left sit flatter on my loft. The top right panel of the left section doesn't produce well until about noonish, then it catches up. In other words the other panels in the same area of my roof with same tilt and no shade are producing like 100 watts and this one producing like 40 watts. I don't know if there is a threshold where the optimizer starts to work better or what? I'm wondering if I should have installers fix this. It doesn't seem like they did it right. I thought with the optimizers that the panels would be producing just as much as the others right next to it and it shouldn't matter that it's on a different string, but it is definitely affecting it. As I read more about optimizers it seems like they only help to produce more and don't maximize 100%, and since the rest of that string isn't seeing much light that one panel can't put out its full potential. Installers said they didn't want to extend the string too long and surpass 600 volts...which I understand. I'm still not sure why they didn't do 11 and 11 or just split them up by sections. I think they said that the inverter would work better having equal strings, which also makes sense. I know about solar panels but I'm not an expert. I feel like it would have been best to put 9 on that one string on the flatter part of the roof and have 6 on the middle string, and 7 on the string on the right. They are on different spots and produce differently throughout the day so it is hard to figure out what would've been the best way to install them Any help would be appreciated. Here is a pic of them producing early in the day, and the panel I mentioned is lagging badly compared to the panel right next to it....the layout of the panels on the screenshots is by layout on the house not by string or block. You can see the middle string extends to the left string one panel. AGain the background is my house and layout. The front of the house faces SW
Here is a pic of them producing well after about 1230 pm
AGAIN ANY HELP IS GREATLY APPRECIATED. I HAVE A 10 YR LABOR AND MATERIALS WARRANTY AND I SPENT A LOT OF MONEY AND WANT TO MAKE IT BACK ASAP. LET ME KNOW IF THERE IS A BETTER WAY TO SET THESE UP. THX!!!
I have Trina Solar smart modules. 22x300 Watt panels and a Fronius Primo 6.0.1 Inverter. Panels are 72 cell instead of 60, total of 6600 watts and they have Tigo optimizers on them from the factory. I wanted to input from experts so I'm posting in this forum. The panels are laid out on 3 different sections of my roof. They were supposed to split them into two strings of 11 ea, they ended up going with 3 strings, 7 7 and 8. Anyhow one of the strings extends into a panel on a different section of my roof and at a different tilt and that panel hasn't been producing well at all. It seems like it is limited by the string it is attached to, as that section is shaded until afternoon. Here is a screenshot from my tigo monitoring pg you can see the top right panel of the left side section is under producing.
You can kind of tell just by looking at them. The 7 on the right side face south and produce great. The others are at a SW orientation and produce pretty good. The 6 in the middle are along the ridge of my roof. You can see my house is the background of the Tigo screenshot so you can see how they are laid out. The 9 on the left sit flatter on my loft. The top right panel of the left section doesn't produce well until about noonish, then it catches up. In other words the other panels in the same area of my roof with same tilt and no shade are producing like 100 watts and this one producing like 40 watts. I don't know if there is a threshold where the optimizer starts to work better or what? I'm wondering if I should have installers fix this. It doesn't seem like they did it right. I thought with the optimizers that the panels would be producing just as much as the others right next to it and it shouldn't matter that it's on a different string, but it is definitely affecting it. As I read more about optimizers it seems like they only help to produce more and don't maximize 100%, and since the rest of that string isn't seeing much light that one panel can't put out its full potential. Installers said they didn't want to extend the string too long and surpass 600 volts...which I understand. I'm still not sure why they didn't do 11 and 11 or just split them up by sections. I think they said that the inverter would work better having equal strings, which also makes sense. I know about solar panels but I'm not an expert. I feel like it would have been best to put 9 on that one string on the flatter part of the roof and have 6 on the middle string, and 7 on the string on the right. They are on different spots and produce differently throughout the day so it is hard to figure out what would've been the best way to install them Any help would be appreciated. Here is a pic of them producing early in the day, and the panel I mentioned is lagging badly compared to the panel right next to it....the layout of the panels on the screenshots is by layout on the house not by string or block. You can see the middle string extends to the left string one panel. AGain the background is my house and layout. The front of the house faces SW
Here is a pic of them producing well after about 1230 pm
AGAIN ANY HELP IS GREATLY APPRECIATED. I HAVE A 10 YR LABOR AND MATERIALS WARRANTY AND I SPENT A LOT OF MONEY AND WANT TO MAKE IT BACK ASAP. LET ME KNOW IF THERE IS A BETTER WAY TO SET THESE UP. THX!!!
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