As someone who has been doing off grid systems since 1985 I can say from 
experience, ALL sealed batteries are CRAP... especially in off grid 
applications. They are too fragile and do not last.

Todd



On Sunday, November 29, 2009 5:48pm, "Conrad Geyser" <conr...@cape.com> said:



In the vein of us on grid folks who’sheads spin when the off grid folks start 
talking about charge programming andgen set start up parameters…
 
I am servicing an orphaned 48 V off gridsystem that is only 1 1/2 years old, 
with 40 Concorde Sun Extender batteries,which are for the most part, shot 
(about half of them under 10V after a generatorEQ charge).  I’m sure the 
batteries have been abused at least afterthe point that someone lowered the 
generator start voltage to 40V.  We’restill doing fact finding on the charge 
parameters for the PV and wind, but I’mwondering if there is anyone that has an 
opinion on the Concorde batteries.
 
And at least at this point, I’m gladI had to study for some off grid questions 
on the NABCEP test, not to mentionthe conversations on this list.    : >
 
Conrad
Cotuit Solar
 
 
 


From: 
re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org]
 On Behalf Of Bob-O Schultze
Sent: Wednesday, November 25, 20099:59 AM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Nabcep - grid tie---Off grid
 
William,

Nice to meet you -however briefly- at the Solar Zoo in Anaheim.

If you don't see the value in being NABCEP certified, then youshouldn't bother 
with it. If your state- as more than a few have- decides torecognize it in some 
way that affects your pocket, then you'll likely changeyour mind PDQ. I've 
personally gotten one or two jobs that I know about becauseI was Certified and 
the other bidder was not, but our bids were very close inprice. Low-ballers, 
like head lice, are just a nasty fact of life.

While I generally agree with you on your point #2, it varies a lotstate to 
state. I'm licensed in CA and OR. While I understand the rules in CAare 
changing, enforcement is, and has always been, a joke. In OR, you need a4000 
hour apprenticeship AND 256 hours of general electrical classroom time toget a 
Renewable Energy license. A general journeyman license is twice that.I've had 
inspectors come to our job site and check that everyone is licensed.In OR, you 
don't lay hands on a wire without a license. Ever hear of the likein CA? Maybe 
in the big cities, but nowhere else.

We're totally on the same page about the IBEW. If you understand thattheir goal 
is total domination of the electrical trade everywhere, a lot of howthey 
operate makes sense. I'm a pro-Union kinda guy as a rule, but, likereligion, 
too much of a thing is way worse than none.

As to experience with EMT and the like, again it varies state to stateand 
certainly region to region. In this neck of the woods, if you can't bend 
anoffset or saddle bend, you are either a new apprentice or unemployed.

Best, Bob-O

 


On Nov 24, 2009, at 11:48 PM, William Miller wrote:
 

Friends:

I'd like to make two brief points on the training/NABCEP debate:

1. If I thought NABCEP certification would get me one more job I'd normallylose 
to a low-ball bidder, I'd be inclined to sit for the test, but it won't.

2. Most solar electric installers could not be considered electricians. Until 
they learn the trade, they are not qualified to install the most basicgrid tie 
system.  Conversely, many electricians with the most basic electricalskills 
think they know all that needs to be known to design and installsolar-electric. 
 Wrong again.

I don't support the IBEW concept of taking over the solar industry by force,but 
I do respect their concept of actually encouraging well rounded 
electrician'sskills.  How many solar installers can actually lay an offset into 
a stickof EMT?  Not many.  Most are glorified stereo installers, pluggingand 
praying.

Respectfully,

William Miller
 
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