Drake:
Sorry again, but this is still not clear. Questions below in red (could
you draft a block diagram and post it?):
At 03:56 PM 7/30/2008, Drake Chamberlin wrote:
2. The commercial building has a service that you will not feed the
grid-tie to.
Yes. It also has its own service. The c
As long as the solar breaker is not larger than panels main breaker
there is no potential busbar overloading. The whole concept was created
by a misinterpretation of what the bus rating actually is.
A review of this issue by qualified materials engineers will end this
issue entirely. The breakers
Sounds like a lot of Apollo swap outs. We're considering one 'cause of the
higher voltage... How have they been holding up?
Conrad
Cotuit Solar
- Original Message -
From: "John Raynes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "RE-wrenches"
Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2008 5:00 PM
Subject: [RE-wrenches]
For those wrenches supporting Apollo T80's I have two units and a
wireless display available for sale. One of the T80's was in the
field for a year before it was pulled and replaced with a different
controller. It needs firmware upgrades. The other T80 is a recent
factory re-build, never sta
Hi Peter
I had a similar experiance, and I took the material to Valmount (local coatings
outfit) they tested and gave me solution, which I had them apply. the finish
is about 1.5 years old and still looks good.
Darryl
--- On Wed, 7/30/08, Peter Parrish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> From: Pete
At 09:25 AM 7/30/2008, you wrote:
Hi Drake,
do you know how this is all done in say Germany?
I realize they have different codes ( hopefully) but how do they
address the main issue of potential bussbar overloading?
thanks,
jay
That is a good question.
Drake Chamberlin
Athens Electric
OH Lic
At 09:48 AM 7/30/2008, you wrote:
Drake:
I'm sorry, but this isn't making any sense. Here is what I understand:
1. There is a commercial building that you would install a grid-tie
PV on the roof.
Yes.
2. The commercial building has a service that you will not feed the
grid-tie to.
Yes
Wrenches,
[I don't think this got posted earlier or perhaps it is too prosaic a
question for reply]
We have a high-end client for whom we are installing a 12 kWp system on an
essentially flat roof. The terrain slopes down from the street to the house
(and there is an additional 2.5 deg slope on t
Drake:
I'm sorry, but this isn't making any sense. Here is what I understand:
1. There is a commercial building that you would install a grid-tie PV on
the roof.
2. The commercial building has a service that you will not feed the
grid-tie to.
3. This commercial building has a "feed-through" b
Hi Drake,
do you know how this is all done in say Germany?
I realize they have different codes ( hopefully) but how do they
address the main issue of potential bussbar overloading?
thanks,
jay
peltz power
On Jul 30, 2008, at 10:24 AM, Drake Chamberlin wrote:
Thanks to All who have replied,
Thanks to All who have replied,
First, to answer William's question
"What is a "feed-through" breaker box and what are "feed-through" lugs?"
A feed through panel is the type of service equipment often installed
on pre-manufactured homes, where a main switch is needed outside the
building, and
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