PV combiner box protection [RE-wrenches]
Kurt Nelson
sunwise at cheqnet.net
Tue Jun 22 23:47:32 PDT 2004
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Greetings all,
I think this will be an easy one and not a can of worms, but then....
A friendly competitor and I were speaking at the energy fair a while
back and we disagreed on some issues regarding array wiring and over
current protection.
My position would be that the use of over-current protection
(fuses/breakers) within the combiner box at the array is to protect the
series and parallel interconnect wiring of the PV array which is
typically a much smaller gauge wire than the home run (this primarily
concerning low voltage 12, 24 & 48V systems).
If a properly sized breaker or fuse is used at the DC box before the
charge controller (protecting the array wiring from any high currents
generated in the home/battery), and if the home run AND interconnecting
wiring is capable of handling the total short circuit current of the
entire array, is it necessary to have fusing in the combiner box?
For instance if you had two 75 watt PVs wired into either a 12 or 24
volt array and the smallest wire in the PV circuit was 10 gauge, would a
fuse be required at the array if a properly sized fuse was used within
the home prior to the charge controller? BTW, I always use a second
fuse/breaker between the CC and the battery.
Also, as in the 12 volt configuration mentioned above but expanded a
little.... a 600 watt, 24 volt array consisting of eight 75 watt
modules. I would think it acceptable to bring four, two series sets
into one module's J-box (using liquid tight w/ten gauge/another post)
and then use 10/4 SO(w) to bring the whole array (as two paralleled
series sets) down to the pole mounted combiner box from the
tracker/movable/seasonally adjustable top-of-pole mount. I'd then use
two FRN-15s in the combiner box before the distribution block/home run
(necessary?).
In any case, I've been told that you have to bring each series string
down individually, resulting in eight conductors between the rack and
the mast and nothing less than spaghetti in a similar 12 volt system.
I'm hoping this is wrong and wondering what the logic is otherwise.
Thanks for your brains.
Kurt Nelson
SOLutions
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