Gordon,
You need a calibrated solar cell and a pyrometer to measure the actual watt/meter/square irradiance reaching the cells , typically , this is in the 900-950wmsq range with the panels perfectly parallel to the sun , the only time I have seen higher is with edge of cloud effect. You are wrong saying 15 degrees will have no effect , the loss is i cos if the angle error , which is not zero.
Also , your panels will degrade with age , If you believe the 25 year warranty , that would be a little less than 1% per year.
You would also need lab quality current sensing , the GP can be off by 2% (component tolerances of the DC sense circuit)
The best test is short circuit testing the panels using a high precision shut and dvm , compare to the short circuit rating and then scale to the pyrometer reading.
Off hand , I'd guess your panels are a few years old , Fishbowl is off little and your NOT at 1000/wmsq and when you put strings in series , each strings current will be limited by the current of the weakest panel. I don’t see anything alarming here , your numbers are only off 12.3% , which the sun angle error is probably about 3% , the irradiance is probably peaking at 950 , so that’s another 5% , which leaves 4% for the panels matching and inverter sensing … and did you get up on the roof and scrub every little spec of grime off every panel ?? … more losses … anyways , seems inline with real world performance to me ..
Henry
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