MessageNot buying equipment that does not work. Excuse my sarcasm, but what a 
concept. How about not pushing manufacturers to release their products 
prematurely? No one on this list would ever do that - more sarcasm.

But seriously, how about getting in writing from the customer that he/she is 
getting the opportunity to use a new inverter design with new features but may 
also have some unknown design issues that could, from time to time, require 
attention? In conjunction with the customer warning, get the manufacturer's 
cooperation to share call-back and repair or replacement costs. In other words, 
involve your customers who want the latest-and-greatest gadget in the 
beta-testing process.

Some of you heard this story before, but it is worth repeating. Several years 
ago, I did a project with 250 Omnion inverters. Omnion inverters were not very 
reliable but they were all we had at the time. Infant mortality rate was over 
6%. The manufacturer blamed the installers and I blamed inadequate factory 
final testing. Hans Myers, Omnion owner, was a good engineer and a reasonable 
guy. He agreed to switch from 8 hours factory burn-in to 3 days burn-in before 
shipping. I agreed to have installers follow a specific installation procedure 
(send for copy off-list) and sign-off on their installation. Infant mortality 
rate dropped to 0%. Lesson learned: work with your suppliers to the benefit of 
your customers and your bottom line.

Joel Davidson

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tump 
  To: 'RE-wrenches' 
  Sent: Monday, March 30, 2009 4:34 AM
  Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Iverters and their Manufacturers COMPENSATIONcheck 
list?


  Perhaps this might be an additional reason to really work on the installer's 
guild. 
  If this trend continues (it hasn't changed since the beginning) then we as a 
group might single out one Manu per month & NOT purchases their product. 
  Two things might happen; 
  1)They might then have the time to actually build products that have a bit 
better reliability .
  2) If there is a problem WHEN we start to buy their product the Manu's 
realize WE the installers, who SELL & INSTALL their products  + put food on 
their tables, have THE POWER to affect their bottom line as they do w/ ours due 
to lost opportunity costs &  expenses incurred while replacing faulty equipment.
  Probably wouldn't take too long for one of the manufactures to hear from 
their distributors that they are not selling anything.


  I will NOT say that all the problems are due to Manu's problems.
  I know that I am guilty of not ALWAYS checking the basics & blaming things 
that ARE NOT fault of the Manu's but loose wires that. "I swear I checked or my 
wires never loosened up".
  Many of us have offered suggestions regarding trouble shooting issues in the 
past & Bill B has put together a "installers check list''.How about it Bill?, 
knowing you, this is something you put together back at PVusa oh those many 
years ago
  This could be the start of a way to finally develop a industry wide & Manu. 
accepted check list to properly assess an issue & then the fix.
  How about is you manufactures, think this may be a way to compensate the 
installers that DO have an issue w/ your products & not their installations.
    -----Original Message-----
    From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org 
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Peter Parrish
    Sent: Friday, March 27, 2009 5:59 PM
    To: 'RE-wrenches'
    Subject: [RE-wrenches] Iverters and their Manufacturers


    I don't know about the rest of this group, but we have noticed a steady 
increase in inverter warranty calls. It used to be one a year; then things 
started to increase to the point of at least one per-month. In the beginning it 
was the just the GEC-1000s, then the SMA EEPROM debacle, followed by the 
Fronius IG firmware problem, followed by the Xantrex GT "controlled flight into 
terrain". Now both Outback systems we have installed recently have gone down 
(#...@!?*). We are finding that most manufacturers are essentially indifferent 
to installers who are an integral part of their warranty obligation and are 
doing a poor job of supporting installers for a variety of reasons, to wit:



    (1)   Outback will not reimburse installers period. Not for anything that 
they do. They require that equipment be removed and sent to WA for repair or 
replacement, or will ship replacement parts when the problem is obvious, but 
that's it. We have had one repair last month and are facing a second in April. 
We paid extra for the CEC-grade warranty, and I expected more. Based on this 
experience, I will not recommend or sell Outback equipment, until this policy 
changes.

    (2)   Xantrex lost a returned GT inverter! They began dunning us for it. We 
had the RMA on file but didn't bother to write down the tracking number from 
the Xantrex-generated UPS label (what am I going to do with an inverter that 
won't invert?). So not only will they not process our request for 
reimbursement, they "want their inverter back".

    (3)   SMA didn't want to honor payment on a service call for an EEPROM swap 
out, even though I had an email from one of their techies promising just that. 
After I produced the smoking gun, they pointed out that we were about six weeks 
late in sending in the reimbursement paperwork - they weren't going to pay us. 
They've taken a legally defensible position, but it makes for terrible public 
relations.

    (4)   I thought Fronius might the only cowboy wearing a white hat, but no. 
They want us to wait a month before reimbursing not us but our distributor who 
only had the misfortune of selling us bad merchandise. How we manage (and when) 
to get reimbursed from our distributor, only time will tell, but I bet they 
won't cut us a check.



    But I am saving my best story for last.



    (5)   Xantrex II: we had a terrible time getting an XW6048 to work properly 
(the details are unimportant, except to say the design was spot on). I made six 
service calls after installing it last Summer. I did a firmware upgrade, 
tightened even terminal and wiggled every wire I could. I checked the module 
connections and the PV combiner box. We programmed and reprogrammed every 
possible system parameter, to no avail. After about 4 months (5?), I refused to 
make any more service calls without a Xantrex technician at my side, and the 
customer threatened to see an attorney. Xantrex eventually sent a technician 
down to Los Angeles and administered another firmware upgrade and the system 
settled down. Do you think they are willing to pay for any of our post-install 
service calls? 



    I don't switch vendors very often or without good reason, but I don't 
expect to sell another Outback based system, nor do I expect to sell another 
GT. I am trying to convince my salesmen to sell the Sunny Island system over 
the Xantrex XW product (for a number of reasons) even though it is a more 
expensive proposition. 



    Is the following too much to ask for? 



    - Superior, real-time technical support in the field, including generation 
of an RMA on the spot



    - Replacement equipment promptly shipped with prepaid shipping labels for 
the return of the defective item.



    - Receipt of defective equipment by the manufacturer, triggers installer 
payment without the requirement of submitting a separate invoice.



    - Direct payment to company servicing the equipment, within 30 days of the 
service.



    I am not aware of a single Company out there which meets the above four 
criteria, but I haven't looked closely at PVP or some of the others. All other 
things being equal, I would really like to get behind a manufacturer of quality 
inverters who also treats installers as partners in the warranty department, 
and be able to extol their virtues to customers. In the next breath, I will 
patiently explain to the prospective customer the hazards of purchasing an 
inverter from a Company that does not have a sound and equitable warranty 
policy.



    Any thoughts? And let's remember, at least on this list, they are all 
listening.



    - Peter

    Peter T. Parrish, Ph.D., President
    California Solar Engineering, Inc.
    820 Cynthia Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90065
    Ph 323-258-8883, Mobile 323-839-6108, Fax 323-258-8885
    CA Lic. 854779, NABCEP Cert. 031806-26
    peter.parr...@calsolareng.com 





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