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wattclarity.com.au | ||
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www.pololu.com
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| | | | This is the third post in a series detailing our experience over the past two years installing and operating a 305kW array of 630 solar panels on our building in Las Vegas, Nevada. Here are the previous posts: Part 1: background starting in late 2022 and how we committed to the $650,000 project by the beginning of January 2023, with a target completion date of May 31, 2023. Part 2: installation from January 2023 through first day of operation on October 5, 2023. I left off with our first look at the SolarEdge monitoring site on October 5, 2023. It's nice to see nearly real-time generation results and status. The SolarEdge P1101 optimizers connect to pairs of solar panels, so that is the resolution we can see in the array. Here is a close-up as I write this at 10AM on October 31, 2024, with a section affected by the shadow from an air conditioner circled: SolarEdge monitoring site solar panel array close-up at 10AM on October 31, 2024. The 1.0.72 pair of panels and 1.0.19 pair of panels at around 130Wh so far today have generated only about half as much as the nearby panels not affected by the shadows. | |
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judithcurry.com
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| | | | by Chris Morris This report brings readers up-to-date with happening in the Australian generation industry since the previous posts: Australian Renewables Integration: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3. While many were optimistic about Australia's planned changes, we were concerned that technical problems would emerge and that the costs of the transition will also make the... | |
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caseyhandmer.wordpress.com
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| | | | I frequently read about proposals for new solar power developments where the resulting power is moved great distances to less sunny places, such as northern Europe from the Sahara, the US North East from the South West, or even Australia to Singapore. According to these proposals, the key to unlocking greener electricity is massive infrastructure... | |
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www.juancole.com
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