Why will you not be using the federal tax credit? do you not pay any federal income tax?
The P800 is a commercial optimizer that works with the 3 phase commercial inverters... and they cost more than $50 each
Also it is for two 96 cell PV modules not two 60 cell.
You would want the older P320 optimizers which will work with the SE7600H (there is no SE6700H) and you can likely get them cheap ( or older P300 if you can find them).
You could get an SE5000H or SE6000H cheaper than the SE7600H
You are also going to need rails, flash feet, conduit, AC disconnect, wires, labels, permit (costs money) and an interconnect agreement (often an application fee).
You mean a 5 to 6kW system ...
FYI, it is BOD and you are going to need more than $225 for BOD on a 5kW system
You will also need racking and flashing, and standoffs or feet
and again it is not a 5kWH system but a 5kW system
So far you are showing a complete lack of design with little clever to show for it.
are they though?
https://www.solaredge.com/sites/defa...tasheet-na.pdf
NOTE: even when using these with the 208V small commercial inverters, it is difficult to get the strings to be within all the operating ranges. Even Solaredge admits this limitation with their note #5 on the optimizer spec sheets:
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Where's the rest of the cost?
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Last edited by ButchDeal; 01-23-2019, 02:26 PM. -
Reread what littleharbor just wrote. Keep reading it until memorized. Then get educated. Then start thinking long(er) term with a wider scope and past your wallet. Then go to the building dept. and listen more than you talk. Don't buy or do anything else until all that's done.
Going back to my OP, through my investigation of various designs I see that equipment costs of the PV panels, optimizers, and inverter can be had for less than $.50 a watt.
Example; 250w panels $65ea @$.26w, P800 optimizers $50ea. @$.06w, SE6700H inverter $959 @$.095w
Totals $.45w equipment cost (90% of equipment total)
I want a 5 to 6KWH system,
So @$.45 X 5000w should cost me $2250 plus $225 (10%) for COB I believe it is called. I figure $3000 for 5KWH system would be my target. This figure assumes ideal circumstances with clever designing (example being a system design to actually use the full capacity of all devices: I.E 800w for the P800 optimizer)
Most designs I see are wasteful ,particularly with $/Watt of the optimizers. The best I can get is 750w through the P800, I am fine with that.
My ears are open, I am listening, thanks for your time.Last edited by motorcyclemikie; 01-23-2019, 01:33 PM.Leave a comment:
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This is not something to experiment with, unless it's on a house isolated in a desert. Best case scenario, it won't work at all and your money goes up in smoke. Worst case scenario, your house goes up in smoke.
I am in full agreement, I was looking for a "creative" way to bring down the cost of the system.
It's time to visit my local building dept. for permits have a great day!
You know, after rethinking my lack of confidence and questioning the answers (some of which were right) from the support people at Solaredge, I would think that anyone that blindly believes them probably has more money to waste on a over built system than I. My questions may seem redundant here but who better to answer them than the people in the know -- you guys. They use their marketing and misinformation to get at as much of my money as possible, I have to use my common sense to hang onto as much of it as possible.Leave a comment:
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I am in full agreement, I was looking for a "creative" way to bring down the cost of the system.
Here's some "creative" ways to bring down the cost. Do an energy audit. Replace older less efficient appliances. Replace all lighting with LED lighting. Add extra insulation and caulking to your place. Be conscious of wasteful habits such as leaving lights on unnecessarily, heating/cooling unused space, leaving electronics plugged in 24/7/365 when only used for a fraction of that time.
As far as buying factory second solar panels at a price that isn't much cheaper than A grade panels if you shop around, that could turn out to be a bad decision. Also trying to design a system yourself without sufficient experience could end up costing you more than the price of the equipment.
If you still insist on building your own system based on lowest price then at the very least, educate yourself in system design and be fully aware of the equipment's intended use and limitations.
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You know, after rethinking my lack of confidence and questioning the answers (some of which were right) from the support people at Solaredge, I would think that anyone that blindly believes them probably has more money to waste on a over built system than I. My questions may seem redundant here but who better to answer them than the people in the know -- you guys. They use their marketing and misinformation to get at as much of my money as possible, I have to use my common sense to hang onto as much of it as possible.Leave a comment:
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This is not something to experiment with, unless it's on a house isolated in a desert. Best case scenario, it won't work at all and your money goes up in smoke. Worst case scenario, your house goes up in smoke.
I am in full agreement, I was looking for a "creative" way to bring down the cost of the system.
It's time to visit my local building dept. for permits have a great day!
You know, after rethinking my lack of confidence and questioning the answers (some of which were right) from the support people at Solaredge, I would think that anyone that blindly believes them probably has more money to waste on a over built system than I. My questions may seem redundant here but who better to answer them than the people in the know -- you guys. They use their marketing and misinformation to get at as much of my money as possible, I have to use my common sense to hang onto as much of it as possible.Last edited by motorcyclemikie; 01-22-2019, 02:56 PM.Leave a comment:
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This is not something to experiment with, unless it's on a house isolated in a desert. Best case scenario, it won't work at all and your money goes up in smoke. Worst case scenario, your house goes up in smoke.
Solaredge has all of the motivation to make their optimizers and inverters as "compatible as possible", to open up as many configurations as possible. If they specifically say "this won't work with that", there's a really really good reason.Leave a comment:
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The optimizers adjust MPPT to stay within their output limits and have DC to DC buck/boost conversion as well. They the P730 can not output the power from the extreme peak limits of the range of the input which is 1,575w.
The P405 is for thin film PV modules not crystalline.
You can continue to argue that it might but I find it a bit telling that you are no longer willing to put your money on your view of the equipment working in a way that even the manufacturer claims it will not.
They are computers and they definitely kNOW what equipment they are connected to.
The inverters AND optimizers have minimum string lengths which is strings of optimizers not PV modules which are different per inverter TYPE and optimizer TYPE.
The P730 is designated a Commercial optimizer and as such ONLY works with the commercial 3 phase inverters.
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Uh, one last brain fart.
The P405 optimizer has almost identical electrical specs as the P730 and Is max at 125voc and 12.6a -- that's over 1500w or +50% over the production of the three series panels. I bet this would work, plus the Solaredge inverter would not know if it is multi phase or single phase DC current, just to end that extra contension point.
Just sayingLeave a comment:
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Yeah I'm ready to roll over. The NEC 2017 RSS 80v spec would preclude attaching two of these 42voc 8A P17 panels together anyway. Three in series will total 126voc 8Asc close enough but not within the RSS spec.
I had trouble getting into the Solaredge design, i'll try it again, thanks guys.Leave a comment:
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Yeah Butch, I have tossed the idea of the P730 because I have been told by Solaredge Tech Sup the P730 is 3 phase only, I don't see any phasing relationship until the inverter, and their inability to provide answers correctly scares me enough to stay away from that plan.
The electrical parameters with the three panels in series (42vdc 8Amax) each would be within the 125v spec. but there has to be something additional other than electrical parameters.
Make the PV module a little code and it only gets worse...
The documents for the optimizers specifies that they only work with the 3 phase commercial inverters and lists the models.
the electrical is WAY WAY out of range. you are using different numbers.
a P17-335 pv module has :
1X 3X series
VMPP of 42.2V 126.6V
IMPP of 7.94A 7.94A
VOC of 51.1V 153.3V
ISC of 8.54A 8.54A
wattage 335 1,005 watts
The P730 has an absolute MAX Voltage input (Voc) of 125V < 126.6V
MPPT operating range of 12.5V to 105V < 126.6V
Max Short circuit amp (Isc) of 11A
MAX DC input current of 13.75a
rated input wattage of 730w < 1005 watts of 3 in series
Minimum string length is 8 optimizers on 3 phase 208V inverter which is less than the 6 you would have
This is Before temperature coefficient which will make this worse!
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It's not my money - but I wouldn't "guess" about which optimizer to buy. I would use the solaredge design tool to find out which of their optimizers will work with the modules I plan to purchase
Thanks
Yes, I didn't mean to imply that I am shooting it, I'm in the research stage.
I still think the P730 would work, I'll have to put that research off till later.
and the P730 is NOT an allowed configuration the a single phase inverter.
It is unlikely to work,
if it does work,... it is unlikely to work for long,
and is definitely going to void the warranty.
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Or they may just not be tested with the residential ones, and they might work.
(But if it's not a config supported by SE, I'd not spend money on that risk.)Leave a comment:
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The design tool is very simple to use, even for someone pretty new to solar. Just pick your make/model of panel, how many you plan to have, and it will tell you which inverters, optimizers, and string configurations are supported (lists multiple options, not just a single configuration). I have seen an instance where a particular panel *should* be ok to match to a particular optimizer, but the tool says not to do so, because SE has determined (for some reason) that they aren't compatible. Just picking based on wattage alone (Pxxx = the xxx is the max wattage the optimizer can handle) is not enough.
If you order the wrong optimizers, then once they ship they are yours unless your retailer allows returns.
If it were me... and it was me back in summer 2017, then I would order optimizers later, after your panel racking has arrived and perhaps is even partially installed.Leave a comment:
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It's not my money - but I wouldn't "guess" about which optimizer to buy. I would use the solaredge design tool to find out which of their optimizers will work with the modules I plan to purchase
Thanks
Yes, I didn't mean to imply that I am shooting it, I'm in the research stage.
I still think the P730 would work, I'll have to put that research off till later.Leave a comment:
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