We have had a pretty bad drought here in So Cal and our panels have been getting very dusty every day. To make matters worse, the night temps fall into the 40's while the day temps are in the 70's and 80's, meaning there is a significant amount of morning dew and condensation dripping down the panels, creating this 6" bleed line at the bottom that is basically CAKED-ON dirt.
I got a $8 brass nozzle jet for the hose and was able to spray down the panels as much as I could, but the smaller array is pretty high up and the nozzle barely reaches them.
The day after I sprayed, the larger array looked about 60-70% better, but you can still see the bottom portion has caked on dirt. After doing my cleaning, we are breaking the 50kwh mark now for 2 days straight, so my ballpark guess is that we are experiencing roughly a 5% loss in output from dirty panels ... When are panels were brand new, I actually saw instantaneous power readings of 10+ a few times, but for weeks they have not gone above 9. (BTW, is there a way to see max power on a daily basis on Locus?) So that would suggest to me that perfectly clean panels vs what we have now could be an even bigger loss of up to 15%.
I didn't think I would need to address this so early into our solar system's life, but apparently it's going to be this way as long as we get the morning dews dragging the dirt down to the 6" mark , and no real rain to really wash away the dirt on a regular basis.
Does anyone have any tools or suggestions for reaching panels that are higher up? We do have a power washer but I was hoping a simple garden hose and nozzle would do the trick. Maybe a power washer would be better at removing some of the stuff that's really stuck on there. We also purchased a 12' telescoping pole with microfiber cleaner and squeegee, but it's still not long enough to reach the smaller array without actually getting on the roof.
I can live with some power output loss, but to be honest the larger array looked pretty dirty and bad, and I just wanted to get the dirt off. I suppose we will have to get up there and really clean them just to satisfy our own curiosity to see how much loss is a result of the dirt.
I got a $8 brass nozzle jet for the hose and was able to spray down the panels as much as I could, but the smaller array is pretty high up and the nozzle barely reaches them.
The day after I sprayed, the larger array looked about 60-70% better, but you can still see the bottom portion has caked on dirt. After doing my cleaning, we are breaking the 50kwh mark now for 2 days straight, so my ballpark guess is that we are experiencing roughly a 5% loss in output from dirty panels ... When are panels were brand new, I actually saw instantaneous power readings of 10+ a few times, but for weeks they have not gone above 9. (BTW, is there a way to see max power on a daily basis on Locus?) So that would suggest to me that perfectly clean panels vs what we have now could be an even bigger loss of up to 15%.

I didn't think I would need to address this so early into our solar system's life, but apparently it's going to be this way as long as we get the morning dews dragging the dirt down to the 6" mark , and no real rain to really wash away the dirt on a regular basis.
Does anyone have any tools or suggestions for reaching panels that are higher up? We do have a power washer but I was hoping a simple garden hose and nozzle would do the trick. Maybe a power washer would be better at removing some of the stuff that's really stuck on there. We also purchased a 12' telescoping pole with microfiber cleaner and squeegee, but it's still not long enough to reach the smaller array without actually getting on the roof.
I can live with some power output loss, but to be honest the larger array looked pretty dirty and bad, and I just wanted to get the dirt off. I suppose we will have to get up there and really clean them just to satisfy our own curiosity to see how much loss is a result of the dirt.
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