Has anyone included the extra racking costs to add additional modules used to 
compensate for wire loss?

Todd



On Friday, April 9, 2010 10:46am, "R Ray Walters" <r...@solarray.com> said:

All our economic analysis is based on a 20 to 25 year life.  
Safety first, but then good design is to spend the customer's money where it 
does the most good.
No matter how big the wire, you will always have losses. It is an exponential 
curve that never reaches zero. 
It just costs more and more for each extra watt saved. 
Nobody would install a 4/0 cable for a 50 watt panel, even though the losses 
would be lower.
As soon as the design wire starts getting big, I start looking at alternatives: 
raise the array voltage, relocate the array closer, etc.
Also, this discussion concerns the DC losses, we've all agreed that AC losses 
can cause shutdowns that greatly exceed the wire loss itself.



R. Walters
[mailto:r...@solarray.com] r...@solarray.com
Solar Engineer




On Apr 9, 2010, at 11:31 AM, Bill Hoffer wrote:Ray

I think that the point is not the cost, but what is good electrical design!

Voltage Drop in a wire is still undesirable and equates to an unneeded "heat" 
load on the wire.  Are we advocating that if your water pipe is too small just 
increase the pressure so you get the same output you desired.  Sure as long as 
you are well within the operational limits of what the pipe was designed to do 
(over the lifetime expectancy of the product).  Maybe for a short period of 
time that is fine, but we are talking about a system that we want to perform 
for 25+ years.  I am sure we have all seen 25+ year old wiring in a house that 
has become brittle due to operating right at the limit, not enough to pop the 
breaker, but enough over a long period of time to deteriorate the copper.  Heat 
is not our friend.

The worse use of solar electricity is for heating, and I really do not want to 
install extra PV just to heat my wire.  Nobody said that good electrical design 
was cheap!  I will continue to design my voltage drop at 1.5% and as always 
attempt to meet that goal as inexpensively as possible.  NEC is a minimum we 
need to meet and is not necessarily the best electrical design practice!  When 
we are talking about Mega-watt commercial installations, It would be pretty 
silly to have a system shut down (ie lost production = lost investment money) 
because of saving some money on wire.

Bill Hoffer PE
Sunergy Engineering Services PLLC


On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 11:41 PM, R Ray Walters <[mailto:r...@solarray.com] 
r...@solarray.com> wrote:

Over the same amount of time a similar investment in PV would save even more 
money.



R. Walters
[mailto:r...@solarray.com] r...@solarray.com
Solar Engineer







On Apr 8, 2010, at 4:28 PM, Bob-O Schultze wrote:

Guys,
Is it just me being dense or are none of you folks advocating for higher VD 
looking at the savings over time?
If we assume that Kent's wire costs are correct (and even assuming a 33% 
mark-up, he's paying WAY, WAY too much for wire) , the difference in delivered 
watts between #10 and # 4 wire in this situation is 91W. If I were installing 
this in Southern Oregon, which is pretty average as far as peak sun hours/day 
go, we'd be looking at 91 x 4.5 (peak sun hours) x 365days/yr x 25yrs = 3736 
KW/H. Even at $0.10/KWH that's about $375 AT TODAY'S POWER RATES. Anyone think 
those rates are going to stay the same or go down over the next 25 years? 
Anybody think they won't go up by 5X? 10X? 20X?
So... for what and for whom are we designing these systems?
Bob-O



On Apr 8, 2010, at 12:40 PM, Kent Osterberg wrote:

Nick,

Advocating for an economic comparison between the cost of wire and theenergy 
saved by larger wire is not the same as advocating for highvoltage drops, or 
low ones either.  Even with the present low pricesfor PV modules and high 
prices for copper wire, a 100-ft long 350-voltdc input to a 3-kW inverter 
should have around 1% voltage drop.   Nowconsider a 350-volt 10-amp PV circuit 
that's 500 feet long.  Using 12AWG copper the dc voltage drop would be 5.5%.  
Sounds like that mightbe a poor wire choice, right?  Look what happens as the 
wire size isincreased:

                  Conductor         Power             $ per
AWG   $/ft       Cost         ---- Loss ----     watt saved
 12     0.62      $620        193W (5.5%)         -- 
 10     0.95      $950        123W (3.5%)        $4.71        
  8     1.54      $1540         77W (2.2%)      $12.83
  6     2.37      $2370         49W (1.4%)      $29.64
  4     3.73      $3730         32W (0.9%)      $80.00

It would be reasonable to use 10 AWG copper, but before going up to 8AWG, I'd 
consider buying more PV instead.  Why buy a watt of power at$12.83 when it cost 
less to buy a watt of PV?  The conductor price usedhere, just for illustration, 
is from Southwire's price list forTHHN/THWN wire dated 7 April 2010.  In the 
column of conductor costs Ionly considered the cost of two current carrying 
wires.  The cost ofthe equipment ground wire, conduit, connectors, etc all go 
up too. That makes the dollars per watt saved look even worse.

Kent Osterberg
Blue Mountain Solar, Inc.


Nick Soleil wrote:    
Ifeel that it is best to maintain a 1.5% voltage drop on the AC and DC. 
However, I was just sizing conductors for a 400 KW project, with thearray 1000' 
from the main service panel.  With AC modules, I would haveneeded 5-Parallel 
runs of 700MCM at 208VAC (20 wires at 700MCM for1.5%VD!)  The cost would have 
been over 100K, which was costprohibitive.  However, by running DC wiring, and 
utilzing AL, we wereable to maintain 1.5 VDC drop without being too expensive 
(yet stillexpensive.)
  
 Nick Soleil
Project Manager
Advanced Alternative Energy Solutions, LLC
PO Box 657
Petaluma, CA 94953
Cell: 707-321-2937
Office: 707-789-9537
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