<div dir="ltr"><div><div>Eric,<br><br></div>I am aware of a similar experience. Knowing the PV will hopefully be in place and without maintenance needs for decades does seem to warrant putting the most robust connector in place. Inverter errors is what first identified the problem. We did question the supplier to see if anyone else was having trouble, thinking perhaps it was a bad batch with some kind of defect? The only thing we could come up with is that perhaps the wrong size screwdriver for securing the wires could cause it. Some brands require an allen wrench (which now makes sense to me) but the brand we had was a straight-head screw. We found that a slightly too big screwdriver worked for the first few turns but then hit the rim inside the insulated connector and wouldn't fully tighten the wire down. IF that were the cause then it was essentially arcing because of a loose connection. However, a pull test on the wire would have discovered a loose connection AND analyzing several of the incidences we saw each seemed to have very tight wire connections, so I'm not convinced this was the problem. Your post is the first I've read of anyone else having this trouble, but I think most installers use wire nuts.<br><br></div>Rebecca Lundberg<br><div><br><br><div><div><div class="gmail_extra"><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
Wrenches,<br>
<br>
We have been having Polaris connectors start to fail on older installs. About 4 or 5 years ago we abandoned wire nuts in favor of the much more pricey, but deemed safer Polaris insulated tap connectors in our combiners. About a year ago we transitioned, about 80% away from Polaris to Buchannon connectors. We have had two recent call-backs on systems downed due to Polaris connectors burning up inside of boxes. (No damage beyond the connector itself). Recently we interfaced with another solar install firm that has gone back to wire nuts due to this same problem. Anyone else seeing this? Wondering if this is an industry-wide issue regarding a Polaris manufacturing defect or if we're still in the realm of isolated flukes.<br>
<br>
Eric<br>
SunHarvest<br>
<a href="tel:%28530%29%20559-5023" value="+15305595023">(530) 559-5023</a><br></blockquote></div></div></div></div></div></div>