I'd like to reopen this discussion, because I am designing a system that needs to use two different orientations, and I'm getting conflicting answers.
I'm talking about a setup with, say, one string with all the panels facing southeast, and another string with all the panels facing southwest, on the same inverter.
Fronius claims that with their inverters, this will result in a penalty of under 1%. (This is in a report at
http://www.fronius.com/worldwide/usa.so ... itions.pdf .)
Sunny Boy's FAQ says not to do it. It makes no distinction between panels in the same string and different strings. (See
http://www.sma-america.com/sysdesign.html question 3.) I called Sunny Boy, and a tech told me there would be about a 5% penalty for using differently oriented strings, with any manufacturer's inverter. I won't repeat his exact words regarding claims to the contrary, but he was vigorously dubious.
Xantrex customer support emailed me that "As long as each string is on the same side of the roof, you will get pretty good efficiency. You will get full production from one string and whatever is possible from the shaded one." This was in response to a question about this specific system orientation, so I take it he meant that all the panels in a string had to have the same orientation.
Does that mean that Xantrex and Fronius have a better algorithm? Or am I getting some incorrect guidance?