Exposed single conductor sunlight resistant cable in cable trays are widely 
used in PV systems outside the US.
There is a very large installed base of systems with good long term performance 
data using this type of construction.
We should not discount the advantages of wire cable trays just because we are 
unfamiliar with it.

Look at data cabling - Characterized by many, relatively small, cables over 
long distances with periodic drops.
Sounds a lot like PV source circuits (other than voltage and current in the 
wires of course).
There are lots of videos out there showing how to pull 10's of pairs of wires 
simultaneously in cable trays.
IMHO, we need to look at ideas like this to reduce installation cost and time.

Installation costs are becoming the tall pole in the tent and new thinking is 
needed.
As systems are falling to sub $3.00 /Watt all-in, running wire in conduit will 
simply not be cost effective.
Running wire in conduit is one of the reasons PV installation costs in the US 
are double (or more) of those in Europe.
As one of my former German colleagues noted:
"It is only in the US where you need first to be a plumber before you can be an 
electrician"

Best Regards,

John Berdner
General Manager, North America

SolarEdge Technologies, Inc.
3347 Gateway Boulevard, Fremont CA 94538 USA  (*Please note of our new address.)
T: 510.498.3200, X 747
M: 530.277.4894

From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org 
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Allan Sindelar
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2013 8:51 AM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Cable tray

Andrew,
We have used #10 USE-2 for about 16 years, and our high-elevation New Mexico 
sun is quite intense. I have yet to see any degradation exceeding fading 
discoloration on any conductors from that far back, even when directly exposed 
to sunlight. No cracking, peeling, delaminating, or hardening.
Allan
Allan Sindelar
al...@positiveenergysolar.com<mailto:al...@positiveenergysolar.com>
NABCEP Certified Photovoltaic Installer
NABCEP Certified Technical Sales Professional
New Mexico EE98J Journeyman Electrician
Founder and Chief Technology Officer
Positive Energy, Inc.
3209 Richards Lane (note new address)
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87507
505 424-1112
www.positiveenergysolar.com<http://www.positiveenergysolar.com/>


On 3/27/2013 8:41 AM, Andrew Truitt wrote:
Bill - What is your take in conductor insulation degradation over time when 
exposed to UV? Regardless of the "sunlight resistant" labeling, USE-2 (and I 
assume PV wire though I haven't seen it yet) does show wear after years of 
exposure to direct sunlight.  Maybe best practice would be to use cable trays 
where conductors are shaded and [properly installed] conduit when exposed to 
direct UV?

- Andrew Truitt


Sent from my iPad

On Mar 26, 2013, at 11:55 PM, "Bill Brooks" 
<billbroo...@yahoo.com<mailto:billbroo...@yahoo.com>> wrote:
William,

I have all the respect in the world for you, but I'm not referring to "basket 
tray", which is only appropriate for small conductors. I'm talking about 
legitimate cable tray that can be up to 12" wide and that has a top and rungs 
every 12". The main facilities that use it in the United States are large 
industrial facilities. Most electricians don't get to work with it. It is 
clearly superior to EMT and is at least as good as IMC without all the hassle 
of threaded fittings and setting up expansion joints and worrying about 20 
years of conductors thermal cycling. Even the best electricians have problems 
with this stuff.

I am talking about projects with 800 foot long feeder runs. We can bring them 
in the building and build a rack for the conduit or run covered tray outside. 
As the 2014 NEC will require, you will have to use contactor combiners or some 
other means to shut down the conductors inside a building. It's all doable. My 
recommendation after seeing the aftermath of rooftop conduit by good 
electricians is to put cable tray on roofs and use conduit if you bring the 
feeders indoors. It will become common practice soon. Hopefully sooner than 
later.

Bill.

From: 
re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org<mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org>
 [mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of William Miller
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2013 9:49 PM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Cable tray

Bill:

I have to disagree with you on this one.  We can not abandoned a tried and true 
practice just because some practitioners don't do it right.  I don't know how 
one can justify saying that encapsulating high voltage conductors in a conduit 
is less safe than exposed in a flimsy basket.  Consider snow and ice and 
falling objects.

Too many installers entered the PV field without first acquiring the necessary 
skills as journeymen or women electricians.  I don't see the benefit of 
rewriting the code to accommodate a lack of skills in the industry.

Respectfully,

William Miller

PS:  The temperature adders always encourage us to enter the building envelope 
at the first appropriate location to avoid adding them.  Thoughtful installers 
will do the same.

Wm


At 10:15 PM 3/25/2013, you wrote:


Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
        boundary="----=_NextPart_000_00E3_01CE29A6.37CC5110"
Content-Language: en-us

William,

I would strongly disagree that conduit is tried and true on rooftops. I have 
rarely seen good conduit runs on rooftops. Most electricians have no clue how 
to work with expansion joints. Conduit on rooftops is a bad idea in general. 
Most conduit runs in big buildings are all done indoors for good reason. We are 
the crazy people doing things on the roof.

The sooner we get away from conduitparticularly for long feeder runsthe better.

In Europe they don't have problems with their rooftop wiring systems because 
everything is in tray.

For those that don't allow cable tray for anything less than 1/0, just remember 
that if it isn't called cable tray, then 392 doesn't apply. The NEC would allow 
us to use treated lumber in place of cable tray. This makes no sense.

We did some research on the origin of the 1/0 requirement, and it is ancient 
and no longer relevant. Just because it is in the code, does not mean it is 
correct. That's why we try to fix it every three years.

Bill.



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