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Does the unshaded string "pull up" the shaded string or does the shaded string "drag down" the unshaded string or a combination of both?
The string that has a shaded panel(s) will just operate closer to the VOC of the shaded strings combined panels left generating voltage.
If the voltage of the shaded string ( at voc ) is less than the string in sunlight , then very little power back-flows into the shaded string. What most poeple don't know is a dark string wont draw much power, I have run tests for this to verify things for designs and it comes down to the fact that solar panels are basically diodes. In total darkness , applying a VOC voltage to the array which is back-feeding with bench supplys and measuring with lab quailty power analyzers to the one of my 3000 watt arrays, it has a draw of 15 watts. Not allot and in any type of day-light its zero.
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best design practice would seem to be to stick with single strings, select a inverter with a large MPPT voltage range and operate unshaded near the high end of the range
Yes, a single string is always better than parralled strings due to mis-matches between the strings. Every single solar panel is a little bit different. When you have a single string , even with panels that have mis-matchs in current of a few percent, the panels with the higher current ability will be limited by the lowest current panel BUT , they just run at a slighty higher voltage and hence slighty lower current and end up producing near optimum power.
Having said that, ALL inverters perform much worse at the higher voltages , this is due to high switching losses in the electronics. Running string inverters near there bottom end will from the inverters prospective yeild the best efficiencys
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This would favor the smaller string inverters (like the SMA 2500 and Xantrex GT3.0) and not all these larger inverters where paralleling strings is necessary to get near their full output
I think the large 5kw+ inverters are to meet marking demand, it is not the best solution from a panel harvest, cost (they are more expensive than 2 smaller units) and they are ALL fan cooled which I don't like. A pair of GT3.0's will out harvest Any 5kW+ system , for both the panel losses will be lower and the operational range be more optimal for the inverter
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It would also mean that the Multi-string capability of the Sharp Inverter can be a benefit in sites subject to shading.
The Sharp inverter is the worst performing unit of ALL the CEC certified units, 91%+ efficiency. Mppt is dominated by tempature which for arrays on the same roof, regardless of orientation, will be similar and hench the mppt. I've run intentional miss-matched strings and the differences are 2-3% due to the mis-matching (running a 7 panel string with an 8 panel string) so while its a hit on harvest single panel shading is not really that big of a deal for daily harvest
I don't bother responding to the news-group questions on this, there is some-much dis-information out there. Hope this info helps