boB,

If the cells are still "capable" of 80% or more but a defect is in cell 
interconnection, junction box or whatever is preventing output, then the power 
warranty does not apply. 

Example: The 1999 through 2002 Kyocera KC120-1's have been failing in the 
thousands. A poorly soldered contact opens and 1/2 the module stops passing 
power (Voc 10.5 V). To date, Kyocera is still exchanging these with 
remanufactured units without any legal liability to do so. They even pay us the 
labor to replace them more than 10 years out of warranty.  They have my kudos 
for the way they are handling this.

A manufacturer will be on my sh!t list if they don't stand behind an obvious 
production failure that is occurring in many modules. I hope this is not the 
case with these Sanyo.

Larry Crutcher
Starlight Solar Power Systems


On Dec 5, 2012, at 12:03 AM, boB wrote:

On 12/4/2012 9:25 PM, benn kilburn wrote:
> Doug,
> While the module may be past its workmanship warranty period, if the defect 
> affects the module's power output.... then i would argue that the power 
> output warranty should cover it.  That warranty should be good for 25yrs.
> Anyone care to comment on that reasoning?
> 
> benn


In a way, I don't quite understand the difference.

If a module plain old stops working because of workmanship or whatever,
isn't 0% of original output less than 80% of original output ??

boB


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