Rebecca,
Do your best to research the products before you install them and offer better 
products with few possible points of failure.
Most customers who understand that this is a decades-long investment will have 
no problem paying for premium products up front.
You, on the other hand, will save both money and headaches by not doing 
warranty replacement work for free.

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Mark Richardson
Production Manager
CELL: 518-965-4148

From: RE-wrenches [mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf 
Of Rebecca Lundberg
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2014 4:40 PM
To: re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Subject: [RE-wrenches] Warranty replacements

We are starting to see a fairly steady stream of various solar electronics 
needing replacement under warranty, including micro-inverters, AC modules 
(microinverter failing), and even modules with an integrated DC electronic 
component failing to work from the get go. I work with residential customers 
and care about doing right by them, and of course they expect that their 
warrantied part will be replaced at no cost to them, they have already invested 
a lot in their solar project. Sometimes the manufacturer has a stipend which at 
least offsets the cost of gas but does not cover time to travel to the site and 
do the replacement, but I have recently come across several manufacturers who 
do not give any stipend at all and I am surprised at that. Replacing a module 
in the middle of a pitched roof is no small feat, and getting to micro 
inverters on a steep pitch is always a challenge. As the code requires more 
safety features down to the module level, I suspect we will see more and more 
of this, and the electronics are no longer at ground level and easily 
accessible. What ideas do you have about how to deal with this? Must we have an 
O and M contract with every customer given current product choices?

A similar question relates to a particular module having issues with 
delamination and failed diodes. We have been called out to several sites where 
this has caused the inverter to sense a fault, and testing showed the module 
leaking voltage to ground. Who is responsible for getting the inverter up and 
running when it clearly stems from the module? I suspect the module 
manufacturer's warranty legally exempts them from responsibility, but again it 
is reasonable for the customer to expect a warrantied system to be up and 
running.

Thoughts from the field?

Sincerely,
Rebecca Lundberg


--
Rebecca Lundberg
NABCEP Certified Solar PV Installer ®
Owner/President
Powerfully Green®
763.438.1976 | 
rebecca.lundb...@powerfullygreen.com<mailto:rebecca.lundb...@powerfullygreen.com>

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