[RE-wrenches] P1 micro performance

Exeltech exeltech at yahoo.com
Thu Mar 21 21:59:58 PDT 2013


Wrenches,

I'm probably a lone voice on this .. and not intending to get overly picky.

Could we call power limiting what it is .. "limiting", and not "clipping"?

Clipping implies distortion, which isn't the case here.  Limiting is just that.
The inverter output is limited to some maximum value -- not "clipped".

The output power curve flattens when integrated over time, but this still isn't
distortion in the waveform.  It's simply a point in the output where the derivative
is zero.  Not increasing, not decreasing.  Just .. zero.  No additional increase
in the output for an increase in available energy at the input.  Think "governor"
on an engine....

Thanks.


Dan Lepinski, Sr. Engineer
Exeltech / Exeltech Solar Products


--- On Thu, 3/21/13, David Brearley <david.brearley at solarprofessional.com> wrote:

From: David Brearley <david.brearley at solarprofessional.com>
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] P1 micro performance
To: "RE-wrenches" <re-wrenches at lists.re-wrenches.org>
Date: Thursday, March 21, 2013, 11:37 PM

Thanks for sharing the screen capture, Marco.
Interesting issues to think about here. This is actually prime clipping season in many places (not sure about Hawaii) due to the cool weather. While there are more sun-hours in the summer, the cell temperatures are often high enough that you won't tend to see rated power out of the modules. 
While I'm not running performance models for work, the people who do are routinely increasing dc-to-ac ratios, often as high as 1.4-to-1. Having said that, most inverters aren't installed on a roof. (Not yet anyway.) 
I'd probably lean to a more conservative sizing ratio for micros. While I can imagine some scenarios where I'd be comfortable with a 215 W micro on a 265 W module—like a flat roof install in Vermont, which reportedly doesn't see 1,000 W/m^2 very often—I wouldn't try that here in Texas.

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