Hi, I'm a solar engineer in PA. I own my own integration company. I am well versed in primarily grid tied installations and am happy to give advice and help with any questions people may have.
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Hello
Your single source for sustainable home improvements: [URL="www.eco-merica.com"]www.eco-merica.com[/URL] -
Hi Russ, A couple of questions if you would -
The NABCEP part - is that sales certification? Installer certification?
The solar engineer part - what discipline is that a branch of? Electrical or electronics engineer specializing in solar possibly?
What does the NABCEP certification specifically qualify you to do?
Solar Integrator? Does that mean middle man? Or is some beneficial service provided?
Russ[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] -
Hi Russ, A couple of questions if you would -
The NABCEP part - is that sales certification? Installer certification?
The solar engineer part - what discipline is that a branch of? Electrical or electronics engineer specializing in solar possibly?
What does the NABCEP certification specifically qualify you to do?
Solar Integrator? Does that mean middle man? Or is some beneficial service provided?
Russ
When I said solar engineer I was referring to the electrical engineering of turnkey solar systems. I design systems not components.
NABCEP doesn't give any specific qualifications. It's the most widely recognized solar certification in the US and is used by many state incentive programs to qualify installers. In order to get the certification you have to prove a certain level of experience in the field as well as pass a rigorous exam covering design, installation, and safety procedures.
I guess they don't use the term in Turkey, but in the US, the term integrator is thrown around similarly to installer. It essentially differentiates you from a company that just installs solar. We provide turnkey services including design, rebate assistance, maintenance, monitoring, consulting, etc. There are companies that do only installation that are often hired as subcontractors by a company like us. We however for the most part do our own in house installations.
Thank you for the warm welcome to the site. I have been oh so encouraged to contribute to your site.Your single source for sustainable home improvements: [URL="www.eco-merica.com"]www.eco-merica.com[/URL]Comment
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Again, I was born in the US and lived there many years before finally retiring in Turkey.
So you are an electrical engineer?
Flashing a designator like NABCEP in front of your name is a turn off to me. It is a certificate that has nothing to do with anything - other than that you have taken time to pass an exam - Many have the certification and you never hear of it.
Most people have very little idea about the solar field and do not know what the various certifications and 'green' courses now being offered really stand for. They are easily led down various paths out of ignorance - unfortunately.
Russ[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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Again, I was born in the US and lived there many years before finally retiring in Turkey.
So you are an electrical engineer?
Flashing a designator like NABCEP in front of your name is a turn off to me. It is a certificate that has nothing to do with anything - other than that you have taken time to pass an exam - Many have the certification and you never hear of it.
Most people have very little idea about the solar field and do not know what the various certifications and 'green' courses now being offered really stand for. They are easily led down various paths out of ignorance - unfortunately.
Russ
You are correct that people can be easily led down a path of ignorance with random "certifications". That is what nabcep is trying to eliminate by being difficult to obtain. The more widely accepted the better.
Ive only flashed it in front of my name because you took my first choice and it was the first thing solar related I thought of.Your single source for sustainable home improvements: [URL="www.eco-merica.com"]www.eco-merica.com[/URL]Comment
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Welcome to SPT Russ!
Glad you found us and decided to sign up to contribute. It's greatly appreciated!
I look forward to reading your posts!
*also please keep in mind there are some occasional folk that join, talk up their "experience", and have an alternative motive. this is a hyped up market, so seeing fakes is a common occurrence. thats what keeps this board full of high quality content. Our Russ is a fantastic moderator, and it won't take long to see whythanks again.
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Also from PA
Hi Russ, I am also from Pa, (mount carmel), and I also hold the NABCEP certification (entry level). I would like to start my own business installing, but I need to get this info mastered first. I appreciate the opportunity to share knowledge with you and everyone else on this site. Hopefully I can contribute once in a while as well!
JimComment
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Hi Russ, I am also from Pa, (mount carmel), and I also hold the NABCEP certification (entry level). I would like to start my own business installing, but I need to get this info mastered first. I appreciate the opportunity to share knowledge with you and everyone else on this site. Hopefully I can contribute once in a while as well!
JimYour single source for sustainable home improvements: [URL="www.eco-merica.com"]www.eco-merica.com[/URL]Comment
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MSEE, PEComment
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Oh I don't know about that. Licensed PE or electrician carries a lot of weight and I would take a licensed Master Electrician over a NABCEP certification any day of the week. With a Master Electrician I know that person has at least 2 years formal education, 8 years continual education and at least 10 years experience. With NABCEP I can get some kid that dropped out of high school or a roofer who does not speak English.
And I wouldn't be so quick to discount NABCEP. It has education and industry experience qualifications as well as continuing education requirements. The exam itself is also very in depth covering all aspects of solar, not only electrical, but structural design, safety, and best practices. I'd also think you'd be hard pressed to find a dropout or some dumb roofer who can pass the exam.Your single source for sustainable home improvements: [URL="www.eco-merica.com"]www.eco-merica.com[/URL]Comment
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NABCEP is tailored for sales persons, liscensed electricians and electrical contractors. I know the man personally who wrote the curriculum and NEC Article 690 (John Wiley). I sat on some of the same code making panels he serves on. With a electrical contractor license you can can pull the permits, with a electrical liscense you can do the work for hire no NABCEP certification required in any state.
With a NABCEP certification you cannot do the work or pull the permits without a licensed electrical contractor pulling the permits or do the work unless supervised directly by a licensed electrician. Effectively meaning you are an apprentice working to earn your license some day In other words it is not recognized by any authority having jurisdiction. A PE, Master, or Residential Electrician already has all the skills, education, license, and experience to do solar work. It takes about a day to learn from reading a book written by John and it is free. As for the structural, that takes a PE to sign off for, not a NABCEP certification.MSEE, PEComment
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NABCEP is tailored for sales persons, liscensed electricians and electrical contractors. I know the man personally who wrote the curriculum and NEC Article 690 (John Wiley). I sat on some of the same code making panels he serves on. With a electrical contractor license you can can pull the permits, with a electrical liscense you can do the work for hire no NABCEP certification required in any state.
With a NABCEP certification you cannot do the work or pull the permits without a licensed electrical contractor pulling the permits or do the work unless supervised directly by a licensed electrician. Effectively meaning you are an apprentice working to earn your license some day In other words it is not recognized by any authority having jurisdiction. A PE, Master, or Residential Electrician already has all the skills, education, license, and experience to do solar work. It takes about a day to learn from reading a book written by John and it is free. As for the structural, that takes a PE to sign off for, not a NABCEP certification.
They do have a certification geared towered sales, but that's not what I hold.
Also, NABCEP is recognized by certain state rebate programs and is a fast way to be approved to work with them.
P.S. I assume you meant John Wiles. I think everyone knows who he is. Nice name drop though.Your single source for sustainable home improvements: [URL="www.eco-merica.com"]www.eco-merica.com[/URL]Comment
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Where I see the benfit of NABCEP is a residential or commercial electrician as it adds a nice entry to the Resume that might be useful to some electrical contracting company to hire him that does solar as part of their business model, or to a salesman who works for an electrical or roofing contractor to go out to the customers home, pitch the product, and gather the required information to give to the designer or engineer.
I do mostly commercial solar for telephone and oil companies, no residential to speak of because there is no real money in it for my architectural design/build firm. Most of the work is off-grid battery for telemetry and cellular radio in remote areas. Have done some large scale grid tied for large business with Walmart 500 Kw being the largest single project. 90% of all the contractors i hire are commercial electrical contracting. When a roof is involved they sub contract out to a roofing contractor. A small percentage of solar contractors I have dealt with are roofing companies who sub contract the electrical out.
Then the small stuff we do with solar is retainer contracts with roofing and electrical contractors who do cookie cutter installs where we pre-design all their systems, and when they make a sale gives us the details and modify for the project and Stamp It for permits and construction.
But all in all solar only makes up about 5 to 10 % of all our business. If it were only green energy, I would have no business or employing people. The real money is in utility power generation, transmission, and industrial electrical. If the government would get out of the way I could employ a hundred or more people instead of just 9 or 10 which I might have to start laying them off.MSEE, PEComment
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Oh I don't know about that. Licensed PE or electrician carries a lot of weight and I would take a licensed Master Electrician over a NABCEP certification any day of the week. With a Master Electrician I know that person has at least 2 years formal education, 8 years continual education and at least 10 years experience. With NABCEP I can get some kid that dropped out of high school or a roofer who does not speak English.
No disrespect to journeymen or master electricians who put in their time, but there are those eager to learn the right way to do things. In addition, PA residents are only eligible for solar rebates if they use a contractor on a certain list managed by DEP. NABCEP certification is one path to get oneself on that list.Comment
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Jimmy without the electrical or electrical contracting license you cannot do the work for hire. No authority having jurisdiction will allow it. The key is the license, not the certification. The AEES degree is the first step to get the electrical license, then the required 2 to 5 years of documented apprenticeship (2000 hours of pay check stubs), then take the license written test. Any electrician can spend a couple of days reading the NABCEP material and pass the test as they already know most of all the principles and math involved.
I am not trying to discourage anyone from obtaining the certification, especially electrical contractors, but receiving the certification does not permit you to do any installation work. You would have to hire an electrical contractor to do it. Any electrical contractor needing a NABCEP certified member to qualify for state incentives is easy; Either send one of your electricians to take the test, or hire an electrician with the certification.MSEE, PEComment
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