Hello, this week I had a solar system installed with 16 panels and a Xantrex GT2.8-AU inverter. I have two Ground Mount frames with 8 Panels on each, setup at 30degrees and pointing north. The panels make up for 3.12kw. It was also explained that in real working environment I shouldn't expect more then 80% efficency from the 195watt SolarFun Panels, which would mean 2496watts @ 80%
Day one was overcast but the Inverter was reading 2500watts at it's peek.
Day two was overcast but the clouds were thin, was getting 2850watts at it's peek
Day three was cloudy but with clear patches max reading was 2200watts
Day four was a perfect day, but the inverter only showed 2300watts at its peek
Today is day 5, it's 10am and the power has been climbing slowly. At 9am it was showing 2000watts, 10am 2100watts.
Can anyone think of a reason why in direct sunlight with no clouds with panels facing north and at almost the correct angle that I didn't get 2500watts or higher. The installer told me the panels I have work at their best when the sun is with-in 20 degrees from it's center axis, and I think that should cover the 10am to 2pm mark if I am not wrong. The outside temp is 21c at the moment, the panels look clean, no bird poo or dust apears to be on them.
The Inverter is under the house and to save me jogging up and down the stairs all day I setup my laptop and webcam so I can keep an eye on it all day, I havn't learned enough yet to connect the inverter directly to a PC yet. So for now a webcam helps. Incase your interested in seeing it
http://123.243.171.114:29000 I don't expect the webcam to be online for days on end, so if that link doesn't work then I most likely turned it off.
I also added a small 8mb video showing the Watts reading on the inverter, a quick glance in the sky to show the cloud cover and then how the panels are mounted incase it helps to understand why a few days later I can no longer get full power from the inverter.
http://www.skozzyonline.com/video/Solar.wmv (no audio and low bitrate to keep the size small)