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Solar install turning out really bad - looking for some help/advice please.
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If not, you need to change your plans concerning that #2 wire and reduce it to what is really needed. The #6 might work if it meets the voltage drop calculation.Leave a comment:
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Definitely do not need #2, that's way overkill (good for 115A @ 75º C). The inverter will never "request" more than 34.5A per SolarEdge, even with the NEC 125% rule, that's 43.13A. 6AWG wire is good to 65A @ 75ºC.Leave a comment:
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Is there any reason that #6 isn't OK? (ie. do you really need #2 or anything larger than #6? If not, fix the plans to be what they should have been in the first place.)Leave a comment:
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Not a new permit - a change to the existing permit.
Probably for this one you can make the new plan, probably they'll want the changes in red (easily identified when reviewing).
And I'd probably put a note like:
"Change: Changing wire size from #2 to #6 for wire from inverter to main panel. Was mistake on original plans."
For a small change like that, possibly they won't even charge you.
(depends on the planning dept.)
Obviously you need to make sure that #6 is OK code-wise. I don't recall what exactly your setup is. If it's OK for amperage with whatever de-rating is appropriate for it's location, then that's the route I'd take.
Obviously asking the planning dept what they want in a plan-change submission and how much they charge should just take a quick phone call. (probably 30 min on hold and a 3 minute conversation)Leave a comment:
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Probably for this one you can make the new plan, probably they'll want the changes in red (easily identified when reviewing).
And I'd probably put a note like:
"Change: Changing wire size from #2 to #6 for wire from inverter to main panel. Was mistake on original plans."
For a small change like that, possibly they won't even charge you.
(depends on the planning dept.)
Obviously you need to make sure that #6 is OK code-wise. I don't recall what exactly your setup is. If it's OK for amperage with whatever de-rating is appropriate for it's location, then that's the route I'd take.
Obviously asking the planning dept what they want in a plan-change submission and how much they charge should just take a quick phone call. (probably 30 min on hold and a 3 minute conversation)Leave a comment:
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As I noted, it is not compliant with the NEC. And if done improperly it can make the connection more likely to overheat or make the remaining strands more likely to break.
As long as there is strain relief on the wire to prevent it from being pulled on at the terminal, I would consider it safe, but of course I could not encourage it.
Be very careful not to scratch, nick or repeatedly bend the remaining strands, since that would make them vulnerable to eventual breakage.Leave a comment:
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As long as there is strain relief on the wire to prevent it from being pulled on at the terminal, I would consider it safe, but of course I could not encourage it.
Be very careful not to scratch, nick or repeatedly bend the remaining strands, since that would make them vulnerable to eventual breakage.Leave a comment:
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Well, it looks like we kind of have to do new permits. I called up SolarEdge and the inverter will not accept anything bigger than 6AWG wire. An adapter would need to be used, which isn't shown on the permit, so that wouldn't pass either.
The only out would be if there are these terminal blocks that can be swapped out in the disconnect to accept bigger wire? Anyone know?
Edit: Please do not clip the strands to make it fit in the undersized terminal block. Please.Leave a comment:
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You can change wire sizes with a crimped butt splice with an insulating sleeve. With luck the set of splices will fit inside the terminal box, so no visible changes needed and the wire outside the box will be the proper size. You can rent of buy a hydraulic crimper for the connectors. What you do inside the terminal box would not necessarily be required to be on the plans.
The other common technique, not accepted by code, is to clip off enough small strands of the wire to get the rest to fit into the terminal.
But if we can clip off some small strands to make ti fit, that would work? I'd be ok with that as long as it's safe.
Regarding the red label, was that really supposed to say that the PV wires were "underground" or was it supposed to read "ungrounded"?
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Hey, the most important thing is you know the physical design part is perfect. The wiring mostly
just proves you were right and the installer was wrong. Wiring isn't so hard to fix; you ought to
see how much rewiring I did. But you need more tools; use one once and its paid for.
The other common technique, not accepted by code, is to clip off enough small strands of the wire to get the rest to fit into the terminal.
Regarding the red label, was that really supposed to say that the PV wires were "underground" or was it supposed to read "ungrounded"?Leave a comment:
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The installer is still in the picture...fortunately or unfortunately. The inspector did say we could resubmit the plans if we choose, either options is fine with the city as long as the wire and conduit in place is the correct size for the system. The crappy part about redoing with #2 wire to match the plan is that the inverter only accepts #6 as the biggest size, so not sure how that would be addressed.
Oh, and running the PV wire through conduit on the roof...that'll be fun. Lots of panels will need to be removed to access it.
just proves you were right and the installer was wrong. Wiring isn't so hard to fix; you ought to
see how much rewiring I did. But you need more tools; use one once and its paid for.Leave a comment:
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Well, it looks like we kind of have to do new permits. I called up SolarEdge and the inverter will not accept anything bigger than 6AWG wire. An adapter would need to be used, which isn't shown on the permit, so that wouldn't pass either.
The only out would be if there are these terminal blocks that can be swapped out in the disconnect to accept bigger wire? Anyone know?
Leave a comment:
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Oh, and running the PV wire through conduit on the roof...that'll be fun. Lots of panels will need to be removed to access it.Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: