Hi all,
I'm trying to squeeze every last bit of juice I can into a pair of SMA-8000US's without going beyond a level that would be safe or would notably reduce the lifespan of the units (excess heat?).
Panels are Canadian Solar 295W (CS6X-295M). PTC rating: 263.6w, 0/+5%.
Specs here: http://lib.store.yahoo.net/lib/yhst-...022/CS6X-M.pdf
Los Angeles (91436) location. 190 degree azimuth. 5 degree mounting angle. We have room for up to 66 panels (33 per inverter).
Side note: 54 would need to be mounted at 5 degrees to prevent shadowing between rows (roof was already pre-pegged in such a way to make planar arrays possible, but less financially practical). The remaining 12 spaces are in an area that can support up to 25 degrees but I'm not sure that makes much difference given how strings work on central inverters? Anyways, the area of 12 might need to get its own inverter depending on the answer for max # of these panels that the SMA 8000US's can safely support.
One source told me that 30 of these panels per inverter (60 total) is the max we should install. I have another installer that is still a little ancy about that and wonders if we should take it down 1 more notch; he said with 30/per we'd probably be running at max capacity for several hours a day for months.
Thoughts? Input is much appreciated.
I'm trying to squeeze every last bit of juice I can into a pair of SMA-8000US's without going beyond a level that would be safe or would notably reduce the lifespan of the units (excess heat?).
Panels are Canadian Solar 295W (CS6X-295M). PTC rating: 263.6w, 0/+5%.
Specs here: http://lib.store.yahoo.net/lib/yhst-...022/CS6X-M.pdf
Los Angeles (91436) location. 190 degree azimuth. 5 degree mounting angle. We have room for up to 66 panels (33 per inverter).
Side note: 54 would need to be mounted at 5 degrees to prevent shadowing between rows (roof was already pre-pegged in such a way to make planar arrays possible, but less financially practical). The remaining 12 spaces are in an area that can support up to 25 degrees but I'm not sure that makes much difference given how strings work on central inverters? Anyways, the area of 12 might need to get its own inverter depending on the answer for max # of these panels that the SMA 8000US's can safely support.
One source told me that 30 of these panels per inverter (60 total) is the max we should install. I have another installer that is still a little ancy about that and wonders if we should take it down 1 more notch; he said with 30/per we'd probably be running at max capacity for several hours a day for months.
Thoughts? Input is much appreciated.
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