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I have had one in my hands. It is built well enough. I'm not so sure about letting it out of the control of a utility company.Five9 said:In the jurisdictions that fall under San Diego Gas & Electric as the utility. SDG&E will install something called an RMA adapter. This is installed at a cost to the homeowner and rather than upgrading their service the utility will install this device. It bypasses the bussing of the electrical panel and feeds straight into the meter socket doing away with the solar backfed breaker and allowing for a larger system on existing smaller panels.http://www.sdge.com/environment/renewable-meter-adapter
Line side tap or supply side interconnections are done here all the time....Why would UL need to be present? Granted, they use those junk shark bite type connectors that are destined for failure, but they are listed so we have to approve....ICE said:I have had one in my hands. It is built well enough. I'm not so sure about letting it out of the control of a utility company.Solar City has come up with a line side tap at the service. Supposedly UL will be there when it is installed (each time) because it is a field modification of the equipment. I haven't encountered that yet.
Just got a commercial ground mount where they are dropping the existing main from 600 to 500A to stuff in more backfeed...Without any calcs on the existing loads to see if it can go down to 500....Dennis said:So if your buss is rated 225 then you can go 120% more which means 270 amps. If the breaker at the top is 125 that means my incoming solar overcurrent protective device can be as high as 270-125 = 145ampsI think that is the reason that they went with a larger bus and a smaller main.
This is something that is sometimes done in a 200 amp panel. A 200 amp buss can have 40 amp load from the solar array (200*.20). Sometimes the array can handle more so if the load permits the main breaker is dropped to 150 amps which allows the array to supply 90 amps (240-150).
Remember the overcurrent protective device from the solar panels must be installed at the opposite end of the panel main-- usually the bottom of the panel.
Possibly, because the UL rated panel is being modified \ altered,and they want to ensure that it remains UL rated even after the" Why would UL need to be present ? "