The temp. of a panel is dependent on more things than ambient airtemp. alone. To have any hope of a reasonable dart throw at some meaningful data, you'll need an onsite weather station, and some knowledge of what data is important as well as what to do with it.
Desire for answers and intellectual curiosity are admirable qualities. Those qualities without the knowledge required to use them is like a powerful locomotive with no flanges on the wheels.
IMO only, you need not only flanges, but track as well.
The amb. temp. on your roof will be quite different than the nearest weather station.
The solaredge monitoring accuracy, like most other panel monitoring is probably less than any of the variability in your other instrumentation. In any case, unless you have some way to measure or estimate that (monitoring) accuracy, it's a moot point.
Take readings at min. incidence angle on cloudless days. They will give the best chance of max. irradiance and will have the least minute/minute variation.
Temp. sensors "glued" to the backside of panels is pretty much useless without knowing how to estimate modifications to the readings. Their mass, especially relative to a PV panel, the way they change the heat transfer film coeff. between the air and the panel surface, the thermal resistance between the sensor and the surface through the attachment method - the "glue", as well as several other things, make any readings obtained via attached sensors, again without adjusting the raw data, pretty much useless. Do what you want, but know there's more going on and more things required than you know about.
Curiosity and desire for information by themselves do not guarantee meaningful results that reflect some accurate, useful and repeatable version of reality.
Desire for answers and intellectual curiosity are admirable qualities. Those qualities without the knowledge required to use them is like a powerful locomotive with no flanges on the wheels.
IMO only, you need not only flanges, but track as well.
The amb. temp. on your roof will be quite different than the nearest weather station.
The solaredge monitoring accuracy, like most other panel monitoring is probably less than any of the variability in your other instrumentation. In any case, unless you have some way to measure or estimate that (monitoring) accuracy, it's a moot point.
Take readings at min. incidence angle on cloudless days. They will give the best chance of max. irradiance and will have the least minute/minute variation.
Temp. sensors "glued" to the backside of panels is pretty much useless without knowing how to estimate modifications to the readings. Their mass, especially relative to a PV panel, the way they change the heat transfer film coeff. between the air and the panel surface, the thermal resistance between the sensor and the surface through the attachment method - the "glue", as well as several other things, make any readings obtained via attached sensors, again without adjusting the raw data, pretty much useless. Do what you want, but know there's more going on and more things required than you know about.
Curiosity and desire for information by themselves do not guarantee meaningful results that reflect some accurate, useful and repeatable version of reality.
Comment