There was a thread on this forum that discussed this FANKIT02-10 option for the SMA TL inverters, but I couldn't find it by using the search function for "fankit02-10" or just "fankit", so I'm starting a new thread to discuss this. If anyone knows the link to the old thread, I'd be happy to move the discussion back to that thread.
Anyway, the discussion started before around last winter time when somebody wanted to know whether it would be worth the money ($110 online lowest price I can find) to buy and install this fan kit on their SMA TL inverters, especially for hot locations like AZ. At the time, it was not sure how hot the TLs would be running in the summer. Well now that summer is here, I've checked the heat sinks/fins of my SMA 4KTL mounted on the east wall of my garage in the afternoon (when it's in the shade) in 100+ weather, and I have to say that those heat sinks are pretty hot to the touch.
So now I'm debating whether it's worth spending the $ to install this FANKIT02-10 made by SMA or not, just to help remove the heat from those heat sink. It's hard to tell whether the convection cooling in the TL design is working well or not because you can't tell by touching the outside box itself.
I've removed the TL to look inside and installing the fan seems to be pretty straightforward. Warranty concern was raised in the previous discussion, but it'd be pretty easy to remove it if you need your installer to service your inverter for some reason, and your installer would never know that you had it there.
Any opinion about this? It is pretty pricey at $110 online (I think MSRP is $149 or something like that) for just a fan. But if it helps prolong the life of your TL, it may be worth it. The thing is it's not really whether the convection cooling in the existing design is effective enough for hot weather areas like AZ already or not.
Anyway, the discussion started before around last winter time when somebody wanted to know whether it would be worth the money ($110 online lowest price I can find) to buy and install this fan kit on their SMA TL inverters, especially for hot locations like AZ. At the time, it was not sure how hot the TLs would be running in the summer. Well now that summer is here, I've checked the heat sinks/fins of my SMA 4KTL mounted on the east wall of my garage in the afternoon (when it's in the shade) in 100+ weather, and I have to say that those heat sinks are pretty hot to the touch.
So now I'm debating whether it's worth spending the $ to install this FANKIT02-10 made by SMA or not, just to help remove the heat from those heat sink. It's hard to tell whether the convection cooling in the TL design is working well or not because you can't tell by touching the outside box itself.
I've removed the TL to look inside and installing the fan seems to be pretty straightforward. Warranty concern was raised in the previous discussion, but it'd be pretty easy to remove it if you need your installer to service your inverter for some reason, and your installer would never know that you had it there.
Any opinion about this? It is pretty pricey at $110 online (I think MSRP is $149 or something like that) for just a fan. But if it helps prolong the life of your TL, it may be worth it. The thing is it's not really whether the convection cooling in the existing design is effective enough for hot weather areas like AZ already or not.
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