I recently had my 30 Sunpower SPR-225''s installed along with my 6000 Watt inverter. I'm pleased with the workmanship of the install and the look of the system, but there is one issue that has me disappointed.
When I originally saw the site plan (and in reality even before then) I had expressed concern about one of the palm trees near the house and the potential shadow the fronds might cast. When they sent the following site plan to me by email:
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I replied with the following picture plainly showing a shadow being cast from the palm tree impacting the left side of the area of the proposed system.
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In my conversation with the sales guy I asked why it wouldn't be moved further to the right to help avoid this issue (there is probably at least 6 feet of vent-free roof space on the other side). His response was essentially "I'm sure they will"...
So here is the final install:
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My point being the location of the panels was not shifted to the right at all. While I have a pretty good layout for solar (facing southwest in Orange County - 220 degrees), there are some trees around the property that can be issues. Clearly the palm I mentioned, as well as a pine you can see one the left side of the following picture:
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As the sun sets in the afternoon both the palm and the pine can block the sun. Since the system isn't yet a month old what I don't know is what part of the roof is impacted by shade at what part of the day at what time of the year. What I do know is that right now, based on my Sunpower Monitoring, I'm seeing substantial drop-offs from the 4-5pm vs. 5-6pm. Rather than being a relatively nice bell shape, on sunny days I have production from 4-5 of about 4 kWh, and from 5-6 it drops to about 1.3. For systems that don't have shade I've seen a gradual step down with an hour in the 3 kWh range before dropping into the 1 range (essentially a very nice bell curve). You can see production (and history) at the following link. If you scroll through the previous days and look for days where production was in the high 30's you should see the step-down I'm talking about.
Clealy I have some shade issues, so again the question is how much is that palm impacting the system vs. the rest of the shade issues, and is shade primarily impacting the left edge of the system or more toward the center (in which case it would be impacted either way), and how will that change over the course of the year.
So my question is whether I should simply grin and bear it or express my concern? On the grin and bear it side the truth is this is already a low-production time of day, so it isn't a material amount. But added up over the course of a year...or 20 years...it might become quite a bit. They are the experts and the system is relatively new, and I want to believe there is a reason based on the solar-metric (?) readings they took that they opted for that area. I just don't like the thought of losing kWh if it was indeed due to poor placement. Again, I realize as the path of the sun changes throughout the year things can change, but for now I'm just dealing with the production as I've observed it.
Thanks for any feedback.
When I originally saw the site plan (and in reality even before then) I had expressed concern about one of the palm trees near the house and the potential shadow the fronds might cast. When they sent the following site plan to me by email:

I replied with the following picture plainly showing a shadow being cast from the palm tree impacting the left side of the area of the proposed system.

In my conversation with the sales guy I asked why it wouldn't be moved further to the right to help avoid this issue (there is probably at least 6 feet of vent-free roof space on the other side). His response was essentially "I'm sure they will"...
So here is the final install:


My point being the location of the panels was not shifted to the right at all. While I have a pretty good layout for solar (facing southwest in Orange County - 220 degrees), there are some trees around the property that can be issues. Clearly the palm I mentioned, as well as a pine you can see one the left side of the following picture:

As the sun sets in the afternoon both the palm and the pine can block the sun. Since the system isn't yet a month old what I don't know is what part of the roof is impacted by shade at what part of the day at what time of the year. What I do know is that right now, based on my Sunpower Monitoring, I'm seeing substantial drop-offs from the 4-5pm vs. 5-6pm. Rather than being a relatively nice bell shape, on sunny days I have production from 4-5 of about 4 kWh, and from 5-6 it drops to about 1.3. For systems that don't have shade I've seen a gradual step down with an hour in the 3 kWh range before dropping into the 1 range (essentially a very nice bell curve). You can see production (and history) at the following link. If you scroll through the previous days and look for days where production was in the high 30's you should see the step-down I'm talking about.
Clealy I have some shade issues, so again the question is how much is that palm impacting the system vs. the rest of the shade issues, and is shade primarily impacting the left edge of the system or more toward the center (in which case it would be impacted either way), and how will that change over the course of the year.
So my question is whether I should simply grin and bear it or express my concern? On the grin and bear it side the truth is this is already a low-production time of day, so it isn't a material amount. But added up over the course of a year...or 20 years...it might become quite a bit. They are the experts and the system is relatively new, and I want to believe there is a reason based on the solar-metric (?) readings they took that they opted for that area. I just don't like the thought of losing kWh if it was indeed due to poor placement. Again, I realize as the path of the sun changes throughout the year things can change, but for now I'm just dealing with the production as I've observed it.
Thanks for any feedback.
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