Howdy All,
so I'm new to the forum, and have an interesting *ground level* photo of a failed system that I often drive past. It's my seventh year in the solar industry (I got my nabcep sticker a while back, and have done a fair amount of rooftop residential and some commercial as well.) But this is a sort of a brain-twister for me. I'll let the group take a crack at some armchair solar forensics.
DSC02116-1050.jpgDSC02119-1050.jpg
(hopefully these render in the thread...)
Following what was by all accounts an unusually high-snowfall winter here in new england, there appears to have been a structural failure of the frames on the PV modules-- the bottom rows look like little dimples!
Any thoughts? My working hypothesis is that the array mounting design was chosen for aesthetics rather than strength (perhaps some kind of "rail-less" design), and there was another factor that compromised the strength of the PV modules. It might be significant that this array is located at a plant where concrete is processed..
will
so I'm new to the forum, and have an interesting *ground level* photo of a failed system that I often drive past. It's my seventh year in the solar industry (I got my nabcep sticker a while back, and have done a fair amount of rooftop residential and some commercial as well.) But this is a sort of a brain-twister for me. I'll let the group take a crack at some armchair solar forensics.
DSC02116-1050.jpgDSC02119-1050.jpg
(hopefully these render in the thread...)
Following what was by all accounts an unusually high-snowfall winter here in new england, there appears to have been a structural failure of the frames on the PV modules-- the bottom rows look like little dimples!
Any thoughts? My working hypothesis is that the array mounting design was chosen for aesthetics rather than strength (perhaps some kind of "rail-less" design), and there was another factor that compromised the strength of the PV modules. It might be significant that this array is located at a plant where concrete is processed..
will
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