I had a solar edge system installed fall of 2017, operational end of October. The number of panels = 6.960 kW but when I monitor the system performance I noted the output clips at 5.0 kW When I asked my installer he said that the seemly small size of my interver is IAW the recommendations of the manufacture. It would seem that due to the size of the inverter I am limiting the amount of power realized to almost 2 kW less that what the panels are capable of producing. Need some guidance to the proper size selection of the inverter for my system
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Need some guidance to the proper size selection of the inverter for my system
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I had a solar edge system installed fall of 2017, operational end of October. The number of panels = 6.960 kW but when I monitor the system performance I noted the output clips at 5.0 kW When I asked my installer he said that the seemly small size of my interver is IAW the recommendations of the manufacture. It would seem that due to the size of the inverter I am limiting the amount of power realized to almost 2 kW less that what the panels are capable of producing. Need some guidance to the proper size selection of the inverter for my system
It sometimes makes since to limit that much if say you say you had a lot of shadows, or solar on east and west, or your electric for some reason or other limited you to only a 5kw inverter. But SolarEdge does not recommend the size of the inverter other than setting the limit.OutBack FP1 w/ CS6P-250P http://bit.ly/1Sg5VNH -
I was almost put in the same situation as the OP. I signed for an agreement for 21 Panasonic 315W panels (6.615kW total) and based on recommendations from this forum and my own runs of PVWatts and the SolarEdge Site Designer tool, I decided to request the SE6000H inverter, when the installer had originally recommended the SE5000H. This is in sunny So Cal, and my roof is exactly South facing, with minimal shade issues. Various company reps that had done site evals had mentioned that my roof was just about ideal for PV panels.
Panel and inverter install was yesterday, and lo and behold the team brought a SE5000H inverter. When I mentioned that we were supposed to have the 6kW model, the foreman showed me the plans showing the 5kW. Calls to the company were made wherein I got quite a bit of back and forth trying to convince me that the SE5000H was what SolarEdge recommended for my size array, with some fuzzy math to try to show that I would not lose anything using the 5kW inverter. When I mentioned that the numbers that I had run suggested I would experience quite a bit of clipping with a 5kW inverter, I was even told, "I've never heard of clipping before." Needless to say, I was transferred to one of the senior owners of the company.
In the end, the owner agreed to switch with the SE6000H inverter, esp. since that was what was written in the signed contract. But the 5kW inverter was already installed and we powered the system up today while waiting to get the 6kW inverter swapped. And I was able to see first hand that requesting the larger inverter was the right call, as from the moment that the system was powered up around 11:45AM the production hit the 5kW inverter ceiling and remained pegged there until 3:30PM when the system was shut down and the 5kW inverter was swapped with the 6kW. I'm pretty sure that the system would have been clipping for some time before 11:45AM. This was a clear day, with close to 90 degree temperatures, and with the lower temperatures that are more typical this time of year I'm sure that there would have been up to 5 hours of clipping, if not more.
JPKHole19, what is your location? And are you able to share the monitoring charts showing the degree of clipping that you are experiencing.Comment
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I was almost put in the same situation as the OP. I signed for an agreement for 21 Panasonic 315W panels (6.615kW total) and based on recommendations from this forum and my own runs of PVWatts and the SolarEdge Site Designer tool, I decided to request the SE6000H inverter, when the installer had originally recommended the SE5000H. This is in sunny So Cal, and my roof is exactly South facing, with minimal shade issues. Various company reps that had done site evals had mentioned that my roof was just about ideal for PV panels.
Panel and inverter install was yesterday, and lo and behold the team brought a SE5000H inverter. When I mentioned that we were supposed to have the 6kW model, the foreman showed me the plans showing the 5kW. Calls to the company were made wherein I got quite a bit of back and forth trying to convince me that the SE5000H was what SolarEdge recommended for my size array, with some fuzzy math to try to show that I would not lose anything using the 5kW inverter. When I mentioned that the numbers that I had run suggested I would experience quite a bit of clipping with a 5kW inverter, I was even told, "I've never heard of clipping before." Needless to say, I was transferred to one of the senior owners of the company.
In the end, the owner agreed to switch with the SE6000H inverter, esp. since that was what was written in the signed contract. But the 5kW inverter was already installed and we powered the system up today while waiting to get the 6kW inverter swapped. And I was able to see first hand that requesting the larger inverter was the right call, as from the moment that the system was powered up around 11:45AM the production hit the 5kW inverter ceiling and remained pegged there until 3:30PM when the system was shut down and the 5kW inverter was swapped with the 6kW. I'm pretty sure that the system would have been clipping for some time before 11:45AM. This was a clear day, with close to 90 degree temperatures, and with the lower temperatures that are more typical this time of year I'm sure that there would have been up to 5 hours of clipping, if not more.
JPKHole19, what is your location? And are you able to share the monitoring charts showing the degree of clipping that you are experiencing.
In zip 92026 the two days were similar in terms of irradiance with some minor clouds in the A.M. on the 10th and cloudless all day on the 11th, but cooler.
FWIW, after shading adjustment, my daylong production on the 10th was ~6.24 kWh/S.T.C. kW, and ~ 6.44 kWh/S.T.C. kW on the 11th, with the 11th being about 5 deg. C. cooler on the roof during daylight hrs. and also, besides no morning clouds, a bit sunnier daylong with less water vapor in the air. Daylong clearness index on the 10th was ~ 0.69, on the 11th it was ~ 0.70.Last edited by J.P.M.; 04-12-2018, 11:47 AM.Comment
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Most contractors will do whatever they think it takes to win a bid, especially if you allow them to design and select the specifications.MSEE, PEComment
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I would say that a lot of installation companies, big or small, push the limits of what they can get away with on inverter size. Foolishly I say. Larger inverters cost just a little more and we take the opposite thinking in advising customers to oversize their inverter so that they have room for growth and better reliability. Adding on more panels to an oversized inverter is a easy. Switching too a larger inverter is almost never cost effective.
Yes, PV arrays rarely generate what the label rating says, but going more than 10% over is not really smart.BSEE, R11, NABCEP, Chevy BoltEV, >3000kW installedComment
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IAW = I agree with, In agreement with and you signed a legal binding contract. I am sure they will be more than happy to upgrade the Inverter for you for a price. Just like Facebook, you signed and agreed.Last edited by Sunking; 04-12-2018, 05:57 PM.MSEE, PEComment
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I would say that a lot of installation companies, big or small, push the limits of what they can get away with on inverter size. Foolishly I say. Larger inverters cost just a little more and we take the opposite thinking in advising customers to oversize their inverter so that they have room for growth and better reliability.
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That is breech of contract and you have a legal leg to stand on. Threaten legal action. Or even better pay a lawyer to write them a letter threatening legal action if you do not mind paying for an hour or two of his time. Smear their name on Facebook, harass them, embarrass them publicly, make false allegations if they do not respond. Today all you have to do is make an allegation to be considered guilty.Last edited by Sunking; 04-12-2018, 08:34 PM.MSEE, PEComment
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Oh they already switched with a 6kW inverter, so no need to go down that route now. I do plan on making some comments about this if I post a public review of the company, considering that I would have been shortchanged if I hadn't noticed the downgraded inverter during the install.Comment
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Kendalf: I'd be interested to see what your system's power levels and daylong output were after the swapout.
FWIW, after shading adjustment, my daylong production on the 10th was ~6.24 kWh/S.T.C. kW, and ~ 6.44 kWh/S.T.C. kW on the 11th, with the 11th being about 5 deg. C. cooler on the roof during daylight hrs. and also, besides no morning clouds, a bit sunnier daylong with less water vapor in the air. Daylong clearness index on the 10th was ~ 0.69, on the 11th it was ~ 0.70.
Using the SolarEdge "playback" feature showed peak PV array production was just about 6,200W at 1PM. JPM, I'm not sure how to calculate the kWh/S.T.C. kW figures that you described.
SolarEdge Day 1.PNGComment
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SolarEdge data went live for my system at 10:30AM this morning, and I could immediately see the benefit of maintaining my request for the 6kW inverter. First production data point was 5.365kW, and the system hit the 6kW inverter max at about 11:30AM and stayed there until about 1:45PM. Looking at the production curve, I probably would have been clipping on the 5kW inverter from a little after 10AM to 3PM. Temperature was in the mid-80s in the afternoon, pretty much clear skies all day. Looking forward to seeing my first full day of production data tomorrow!
Using the SolarEdge "playback" feature showed peak PV array production was just about 6,200W at 1PM. JPM, I'm not sure how to calculate the kWh/S.T.C. kW figures that you described.
SolarEdge Day 1.PNG
S.T.C. daily kWh production per S.T.C. kW == daily system output/system size in S.T.C. kW. For you, if the reported daily production # is accurate 04/13/2018: Daylong production = 36.85 kWh. System size = 315W/panel * 21 panels = 6.615 S.T.C. kW. --->>> 36.85 kWh per day/6.615 S.T.C kW = 5.57 kWh per day per S.T.C. kW. By way of comparison only, my output was 6.50 kWh/S.T.C. kW.
If I were you, I'd wait for some clear days and full reporting before I pass any judgement. FWIW, and by way of very loose comparison, my production rate @ 1345 hrs. today - about when your clipping seems to have stopped - was ~4.4 kW or ~ 84 % of S.T.C. output for my system with a fouling penalty of ~ 1.7 % as measured at 1309 hrs. P.D.T. Your output at ~ 1345 hrs. looked like about 6.0/6.6 or ~ 0.91 or so on what may be similar fouling to mine. That's pretty high output. I'd compare a few more days before I passed judgement. From that 0.91, it looks to me that your roof ambient air temp. was REAL cold today (like ~ 50 F. or so) , or the monitoring is optimistic on output.
Now, let's get out of JPKHole19's thread. Bad etiquette and apologies to the OP.Comment
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J.P.M. Had the first full day of logged solar production and I'm pretty happy with the results. Curve is pretty much congruent with the partial data from yesterday. Total system production according to SolarEdge monitoring was 47.15 kWh, so that seems to calculate out to a 7.12 kWh/STC kW (47.15kWh / 6.615kW STC system size). Temperature hit a high of about 85 F like yesterday, but less wind than yesterday. I know that production will go down as temperatures increase and as the panels degrade, but it's nice to see the system performing even better than I would have expected.
SolarEdge Day 2.PNGComment
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J.P.M. Had the first full day of logged solar production and I'm pretty happy with the results. Curve is pretty much congruent with the partial data from yesterday. Total system production according to SolarEdge monitoring was 47.15 kWh, so that seems to calculate out to a 7.12 kWh/STC kW (47.15kWh / 6.615kW STC system size). Temperature hit a high of about 85 F like yesterday, but less wind than yesterday. I know that production will go down as temperatures increase and as the panels degrade, but it's nice to see the system performing even better than I would have expected.
SolarEdge Day 2.PNG
Now, can we get out of JPKHole19's thread ?Comment
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