Mark,
I believe the Midnite Classic has this feature built in. Check with them.
David Katz

From: Mark Dickson [mailto:m...@oasismontana.com]
Sent: Monday, January 16, 2012 10:00 AM
To: 'RE-wrenches' <re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org>
Subject: [RE-wrenches] Shedding ice

I recall a conversation a while back about the possibility of “reversing” the 
current in a solar module to increase the cell temp enough to shed ice/rime.  
To follow-up, has anybody been successful at this?  I am guessing, if so, it 
would entail, removal of diodes, increasing PV and battery capacity and some 
way to sense the ice at the very least. . . It sounds good in theory, but I am 
skeptical as to whether it will work in reality. . .

Best regards,

Mark Dickson,
NABCEP Certified Solar PV Installer ™
Oasis Montana Inc.

________________________________
From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org 
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Allan Sindelar
Sent: Monday, January 16, 2012 10:52 AM
To: re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Request for Gennie Recommendation

Wrenches,
I very much appreciate this ongoing thread, thank you.

This actually feels like one of those "damned if you do, damned if you don't" 
scenarios. The system is six years old, poorly designed and installed. Two 
SW5548s, most likely chosen in order to run a 2HP conventional well pump for 
this manufactured home. Thirty-two L16s in four strings, in two unvented 
battery boxes in an unheated shed at 7800'. 1.66kW of PV plus an H40? wind 
generator, in an area not known for great wind resource. The inverters either 
were never programmed correctly or lost programming the first time a battery 
was replaced, so the batteries never got above default 57.6V and were never 
equalized. When the L16s started failing, the installer instructed the owners 
to replace individual batteries, over and over until 17 of the 32 had been 
replaced, one or two or four at a time. With a continuing stream of failing 
cells, each time the well pump came on the voltage dropped to "must start" and 
the generator came on. With default programming, the inverters would charge to 
57.6V (if the batteries would get up there - not sure if they ever did), then 
go through the two-hour absorption, then shut off and soon the cycle would 
repeat.

The installer put a Link-10 in the home, but without a prescaler, so it 
couldn't work on a 48V system. So he tapped off of part of one string. All 
monitor programming was at default settings, so the system monitor had been 
useless to the homeowners since installation. This was designed and installed 
by someone in business doing wind and PV since the 1980s. His website claims he 
is "the most experienced contracting company in the Southwest specializing in 
electric/electronic installation, service and repair of independent, remote or 
utility integrated power generation power supplies. We provide electrical 
engineering design, specializing in on-site electrical power generation and 
related control systems." This is some mighty poor work.

Our immediate "rescue solution" was to string together 16 of the replacement 
batteries, program the inverters to corrective EQ, show the homeowner how to 
change inverter settings, and replace the Link-10 with a TriMetric with 
prescaler, guessing at 500 amp-hours. At first this appeared to have failed - 
the battery voltage rose quickly under charge and then fell just as quickly. 
But we later learned that this actually worked, as they told us that after 
running a long corrective EQ, the batteries came back and the generator ran far 
less. But then the existing generator failed to start; apparently just worn 
out, and they're in bad shape.

We plan to add about 2-2.5kW of array, although we have no load profile from 
them yet. The existing array is on two poles. The (original) smaller array of 8 
Sharp 80W 12V modules is shaded during winter by the larger array of 6 Sharp 
170W modules during the mornings. The larger array is shaded by both a juniper 
tree on winter mornings (until after 11 am) and by the power equipment shed on 
winter afternoons (after 3 pm). The ground is frozen now, so we have no easy 
way to either increase the array of move the existing arrays out of where they 
shade each other.

They have two SW5548s, so need around 15kW at 7800' to run the inverters at 
full capacity. The unknown is that we don't yet know what size the new battery 
bank will be; my SWAG is about 1,000 a-hr in a single string of industrial 
cells. Together the SWs can charge at 120A, so 1,000 A-hrs would be a good 
match. You are correct that the generator run time will be greatly reduced once 
the array is increased, the batteries replaced, and their loads reduced through 
customer education. But they need a gennie right away, as their PV and wind 
can't keep up and the system is shutting down. I'm hesitant to recommend a 
generator of less than industrial quality, given their experience to date with 
two residential units. And any good generator has a 4-6 week lead time.

What would you do in this situation?
Allan

P.S. Chris Mason, your website doesn't jive...I went to 
www.cometsystems.co<http://www.cometsystems.co> and got a site that said "Comet 
Systems Ltd. is a Certified Reseller for Xorcom PBX products and Ruckus 
Wireless." Doesn't appear to have anything to do with either PV or generators. 
Can you enlighten us?
Allan Sindelar
al...@positiveenergysolar.com<mailto:al...@positiveenergysolar.com>
NABCEP Certified Photovoltaic Installer
NABCEP Certified Technical Sales Professional
New Mexico EE98J Journeyman Electrician
Positive Energy, Inc.
3201 Calle Marie
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87507
505 424-1112
www.positiveenergysolar.com<http://www.positiveenergysolar.com/>



On 1/16/2012 9:03 AM, Dave Palumbo wrote:
Chris,

It would be very helpful if you quote “run hours” rather than “years”.

For example we have seen:

Inexpensive small generators (generally not worth rebuilding) 300 to 500 hours. 
These are gasoline models of various brands and Generac LP gas models. 3kW to 
10kW in size typically.

Honda gasoline generators 2,500 hours and then rebuild.

10kW Kohler water cooled diesel gen set still operating within specs at 9,600 
hours (rebuilt after 5,500 hrs). This has been in service for 16 years, the 
first 4 years without inverter/battery system, and another 6 years before the 
client had us add a PV array to the system. Since adding the PV array the 
generator has run 200 hours per year.
All are in off-grid service and loaded at 65% MAX continuous (see some surges 
higher than 65%, typically run at 60%, or below, of rated power).

David Palumbo
Independent Power LLC
462 Solar Way Drive
Hyde Park, VT 05655
www.independentpowerllc.com<http://www.independentpowerllc.com>
NABCEP Certified PV Installer
Vermont Solar Partner
24 Years Experience, (802) 888-7194



From: 
re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org<mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org>
 [mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Comet Systems
Sent: Monday, January 16, 2012 10:21 AM
To: ho...@catamountsolar.com<mailto:ho...@catamountsolar.com>; RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Request for Gennie Recommendation

The Generac QT and commercial units do not come with an ATS, you can buy just 
the bare machine or have a complete solution designed for your load.

The Generac residential machines are good machines, as long as you understand 
the intended use. We install lots of them. They are only designed to be used 
occasionally, for residential backup. We get customers who want to run their 
business all day on a 10KW residential generator and are disappointed that the 
generator won't last ten years. They are a cheap, lightweight and cost 
effective solution for people who get occasional outages.

If your customer has worn out two generators already, then (s)he needs to pay 
for a commercial level product. A 22KW QT is not that expensive and will last 
ten years at a substantial load factor. If you give me more information on the 
location, load factor and loading, I can have engineering recommend a solution 
for you.


--
Chris Mason
President, Comet Systems Ltd
mas...@cometsystems.co<mailto:mas...@cometsystems.co>
www.cometsystems.co<http://www.cometsystems.co>
Cell: 264.235.5670
Int: +1305.767.2094
Skype: netconcepts






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