Just to let you all know that a clear 100% sky at any time of the day does not give the inverter much compare to a sunny day that has a hazy look to it.
Yesterday we had such a hazy day, you could say it was a bit on the glare side too and the Sunny Beam monitor was pushing the Limit from the SB 2500 to a 2.51Kw.
The highest I've ever had on a clear sunny day (YES VERY CLEAR) at anytime during the day is 2.31Kw but on this milky day like yesterday the Sunnybeam was on 2.51Kw a few times.
Having 16x170W panels which equal a total of 2720Watts I wouldn't be surprised if the panels were pushing out say 2600W or say close to 2700W but the SB2500W inverter was limiting it to 2.51Kw (2501W) The SDC graph show the same as to what the sunny beam was telling me.
Interesting, bring on more hazy days? Have others noticed this.
Yesterday we had such a hazy day, you could say it was a bit on the glare side too and the Sunny Beam monitor was pushing the Limit from the SB 2500 to a 2.51Kw.
The highest I've ever had on a clear sunny day (YES VERY CLEAR) at anytime during the day is 2.31Kw but on this milky day like yesterday the Sunnybeam was on 2.51Kw a few times.
Having 16x170W panels which equal a total of 2720Watts I wouldn't be surprised if the panels were pushing out say 2600W or say close to 2700W but the SB2500W inverter was limiting it to 2.51Kw (2501W) The SDC graph show the same as to what the sunny beam was telling me.
Interesting, bring on more hazy days? Have others noticed this.
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