Don and Garrison,


The word “dedicated” means “no loads”. That is why, the way the code is written 
today, you cannot plug a microinverter into a wall outlet. There is no limit to 
the number of inverters that can be placed on a single breaker. The limitation 
for inverters, is the maximum overcurrent device specification for the inverter 
and the ampacity of the conductors being protected by the inverter output 
circuit breaker in the ac panel.



There are emphatically single pole breakers for 277Vac single phase circuits 
and it is completely valid to place 277Vac single phase inverters on these 
breakers. There is no need to place them on 3-pole breakers, nor does it 
provide any significant benefit to turn off inverters on other phases when one 
phase faults or goes down. Sometimes utilities get crazy on this point and 
require single phase inverters to have this capability. There are several 
single phase inverters on the market today with RJ45 jacks in order to trip the 
other two inverters on different phases when one inverter trips. This comes 
from utility requirements and is absolutely ridiculous. This all proceeds from 
705.100 in the 2011 NEC and prior that was very poorly worded. The wording was 
updated and improved in the 2014 NEC to make it clear that single phase 
inverters on 3-phase services is just fine and that imbalances are handled the 
exact same way imbalances are handled with single phase loads on 3-phase 
services.



Until utility commission ban single phase loads on 3-phase services (that’s a 
joke—it will never happen), we should always be allowed to put single phase 
inverters on 3-phase services. As we do this smartly and correctly, we reduce 
site voltage imbalance rather than increasing imbalance.



Bill.











From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org 
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of 
d...@energysolarnow.com
Sent: Friday, April 04, 2014 11:36 AM
To: re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org; Garrison Riegel
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Three Inverters, One Disconnect?



Hi Garrison- The dedicated breaker referred to in 705.12(D)(1) means they do 
not want the inverters plugged into branch breakers. One (and only one) 
inverter into each pole of a 3-pole breaker seems safer and better than 3 
individual breakers, and seems to fit the definition of "dedicated" breaker.

I don't know that you can even find single-pole 277 Vac breakers....

DonB

-------- Original Message --------

Message: 6
Date: Fri, 4 Apr 2014 08:01:00 -0500
From: "Garrison Riegel" <garri...@solarserviceinc.com 
<mailto:garri...@solarserviceinc.com> >
To: <re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org 
<mailto:re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> >
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Three Inverters, One Disconnect?
Message-ID: <828201cf5005$edd065b0$c9713110$@solarserviceinc.com 
<http://solarserviceinc.com> >
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

Hi Don,

Thank you for your reply. Good idea on the single 480V inverter, but multiple 
subarrays at different tilts/orientations and strings lengths make that 
impractical unfortunately.

It also seems like a good idea to use a single 3-pole breaker to prevent phase 
imbalance, but I thought each inverter required a dedicated breaker as per 
705.12(D)(1). Thoughts?

Thanks,

Garrison

From: d...@energysolarnow.com <mailto:d...@energysolarnow.com>  
[mailto:d...@energysolarnow.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2014 1:55 PM
To: re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org 
<mailto:re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> ; Garrison Riegel
Subject: RE: [RE-wrenches] Three Inverters, One Disconnect?

With single phase 240 each inverter output is two poles; but since you are 
using 277 each inverter output is between one pole and neutral, so you could 
indeed use a 3-pole disconnect since the neutrals are not switched.

A 3-pole breaker is usually used with 3-phase systems, but since there are 3 
separate inverters it is legal to use 3 single pole breakers provided you get 
them into separate phase poles. However, there would be a phase imbalance if 
one breaker tripped and the others were still sourcing current, so it's better 
to use a 3-pole breaker here.

But rather than go to all the work of wiring 3 separate 3.6 kW inverters, why 
not just use the PowerOne 10.0 or 12.0 kW 3-phase inverters? This would be less 
expensive and would need just one conduit run for input and output.

Don Barch

Energy Solar





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