astraea41 wrote:
I am curious about your install in Lakeland. Did you ground the inverter?
Reason is many folks I know swear that grounding the electronics in lightning prone areas is asking for it!
before i give my 2 cents let me first say hello to everyone and that a few of you may recognize me from northern arizona wind and sun's forum. no i don't work for them. anyway, i agree that most inverters should be grounded with emphasis on the grid tied ones or those that would be using the wiring in your home. put one up to a car temporarilly and i say that it's optional, but better if it had one. not all inverters make this easy to do as some do say not to ground the inverter at all. i have one like that and it has to do with the electronics inside not being able to have the neutral and ground tied together.
solar guppy,
as to grounding the pv frames you are correct that a ground connection in a highly prone area could attrack lightning, but in another sense it can dissipate the buildup charges that lead to a lightning strike too by passing them to ground thusly averting a strike. the risk is present to the pvs reguardless if you ground or not due to wiring running from the pvs and going into the home. as everybody should know lightning does whatever it wants to, but almost always wants to go to ground by generally the easiest path. this is what you have based your theory on for not grounding, but you are still prone to a heavy strike that without the ground wires going to a good ground rod it will follow a path into the house endangering you and your equipment. there is still a risk to both even with grounding, but your odds are better with it by far.
if you really feel it isn't a good thing to ground them or for whatever other reason you may not be able to there is an option. give it another path. this could be lightning rods on your house or better yet a flag pole if you wish, but it would act like a lightning rod to the ground bypassing your equipment. in any case know there isn't any guarantees no matter what you do, but be careful with the placement of lightning protection and their devices. mov protective devices can explode if dissipating a lightning charge. grounds when installed should go the shortest distance possible without sharp bends going down to a copper ground rod of at least 8ft in length all with good proper connections and wiring that is at least #6 copper. in most areas i believe they would require the pv grounding and many with homeowners insurance may wish to check with them too on what they deem to be acceptable to them as they would be the ones paying for damages.