I don't know if you're with SRP or APS. If you're with SRP, they have overall system level monitoring already on their website for daily generation, consumption and net data, and hourly generation data and hourly net, although the hourly net only shows positive net and not negative net for some reason, and there's no hourly consumption.
I was planning to buy a $400 Bluetooth monitoring hardware box up front, but there was some compatibility problem with the box so I ended up returning it. Then I saw all the data already on the SRP website and that was good enough for me, so I'm glad I didn't shell out extra $ to buy monitoring hardware to begin with.
But if SolarEdge has monitoring already built-in to their system, then that's cool, but otherwise, you may find SRP data to be good enough for you. The novelty of being able to monitor things will wear off on you after a while and you won't be monitoring as closely and as often as you would in the beginning anymore.
I think with your situation, the SolarEdge solution would be very effective. You not only have shading issues but also have panels all over the roof with all kinds of orientation and pitches. So that would make your case idea for a SolarEdge application.
I wouldn't touch the Enphase microinverters with a 10-foot pole if I were you simply due to the fact that you live in Phoenix. It's hot enough on the roof already for Power Optimizers like SolarEdge. No need to shove microinverters up on the hot roof on top of that. SolarEdge took the right approach there to still put the string inverters on the ground. They also claim that their string inverter can handle many/any string size configuration and don't have string size limitation that the traditional string inverter has. It's probably worth the extra money going with SolarEdge instead of doing multiple traditional string inverters in your case.
I was planning to buy a $400 Bluetooth monitoring hardware box up front, but there was some compatibility problem with the box so I ended up returning it. Then I saw all the data already on the SRP website and that was good enough for me, so I'm glad I didn't shell out extra $ to buy monitoring hardware to begin with.
But if SolarEdge has monitoring already built-in to their system, then that's cool, but otherwise, you may find SRP data to be good enough for you. The novelty of being able to monitor things will wear off on you after a while and you won't be monitoring as closely and as often as you would in the beginning anymore.
I think with your situation, the SolarEdge solution would be very effective. You not only have shading issues but also have panels all over the roof with all kinds of orientation and pitches. So that would make your case idea for a SolarEdge application.
I wouldn't touch the Enphase microinverters with a 10-foot pole if I were you simply due to the fact that you live in Phoenix. It's hot enough on the roof already for Power Optimizers like SolarEdge. No need to shove microinverters up on the hot roof on top of that. SolarEdge took the right approach there to still put the string inverters on the ground. They also claim that their string inverter can handle many/any string size configuration and don't have string size limitation that the traditional string inverter has. It's probably worth the extra money going with SolarEdge instead of doing multiple traditional string inverters in your case.
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