PVWatts only looks at isonolation averages, nothing else. For the angle, its just uses basic cos-sine math from the sun angle to makes it's predictions. It does not use temperature variance over the day or account for when the sun is shining vs when its raining, and these are very important details it misses for Florida's semi-tropical weather.
The panel temperatures ( roof mounted ) in the afternoon will exceed 65C-70C in Florida vs being close to ambient in the morning, this alone is about a 10% gain being east facing.
I haven't logged data for a while, I have my lab in the house and see daily the differences ... The SE and SW arrays are 90 degrees from each other and are not identical arrays. Currently the SW ones are fully instrumented, so I know exactly the temperature and irradiance and see every day how the afternoon effects performance.
Its pretty simple, its always cooler in the morning and it usually is clear until about 11-12 am then partly cloudy to full blown thunderstorms.
For 2+ years the 5kw array was out performing the 6400 watt array for most of the summer months ( 4+ months ) in actual kWhr production
floridaguy wrote:
I just ran the numbers on an SSW facing roof and an ESE facing roof (90 degrees off of each other), each with a 5.4kW array for May 18 - June 18, 2009. This was a relatively wet period which would tend to favor a more easterly facing array. Even so, the SSW facing array beat the ESE facing roof by 1.21% over that time period. If we'd had dryer weather, it would have almost certainly beat it even more. Unfortunately, I don't have a years worth of data on these two arrays that we are tracking.
I don't know how your logging the data, if the arrays are equal in performance ... in clear weather and ground mounted, SSE and SSW should have identical performance. Lakeland is the epicenter of thunderstorms in the US for 4 months a year, possible a micro-climate, similar to if one is effected by marine fog layers in the morning, I do know its very real here.