Mick;
I train both fire departments and PV installers across the USA on PV
systems and firefighter safety. Covering the roof "edge to edge" as you
say is a very slippery slope for you, as the system designer. It's not
legal in many areas, where setbacks and access pathways for firefighters
are required (see CalFire regulations, or contact me for more
information on these).
And even if it *is* legal in your area, an "edge to edge" array cripples
your local fire department as to their options in fighting a fire in or
around that structure--whether it be just an ember from the neighbor's
BBQ lodged in the roof, an oncoming wildfire, or a room on fire inside
from a cigar in a wastebasket.
In any case, as a firefighter since 1998, your question gives me the
cold chills. "Edge to edge" in PV installer jargon can very easily lead
to "let it burn" in firefighter jargon. In PR jargon, you are looking at
a possible newspaper headline that says "Solar panels made house fire
too dangerous to fight, Fire Chief says."
Don't go there. Plan in access pathways. If you don't, an ember from the
neighbors BBQ could bring it all down.
DAN FINK
Buckville Energy Consulting LLC
danf...@buckville.com
Hello, Team~
I'm laying out some Sanyo modules on paper. Twelve of them fit the
roof with almost too much perfection: this would be difficult to
install as it would fill the roof "edge to edge" in both directions.
Are there consistent guidelines about the amount of roof edge which
must remain uncluttered or is this mainly driven by the amount of
aggravation that the installer is willing to tolerate? Which
organizations would want to influence such decisions in the Atlanta
region? Details are: residential, new construction, wooden truss type
roof framing, finish roofing yet to be decided.
I've seen fancy photos of rooftops which are covered edge to edge, but
I suppose those are "building integrated" PV systems instead of
discrete modules mounted above the roofing material. Who decides if
those are "OK' for no walkways compared to a roof that is fully loaded
with Sanyo type modules? How are such decisions made?
I like the "top clamp" style mounts but UniRac SolarMount rail systems
need about a 1" gap from one module to the next. Is there anyone with
similar hardware that can get a grip within a smaller gap?
Thanks in advance,
Mick Abraham, Proprietor
www.abrahamsolar.com <http://www.abrahamsolar.com>
_______________________________________________
List sponsored by Home Power magazine
List Address: RE-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Options & settings:
http://lists.re-wrenches.org/options.cgi/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org
List-Archive: http://lists.re-wrenches.org/pipermail/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org
List rules & etiquette:
www.re-wrenches.org/etiquette.htm
Check out participant bios:
www.members.re-wrenches.org