
Moxi
Nah cant Moxi, the installers have cable tied some of the cables along the runs which will stop me pushing something along the lengths, and just left the connectors dangling. Managed to get to all of them except two and get them off the tiles.Moxi wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 12:58 pm Resy can you access the cables further back and use a cable tidy slinky to bind them together pop a tie or twist wire around that and push the whole thing along to the mc4 connector and tie off at you end so it’s lifted a bit and repositioned ? Not ideal but might be a fix until traction on your arms extend your reach towards the 2 m mark![]()
Moxi
I presume your SMA inverter has its Optitrac switched on and set for 6min (fastest) scanning interval with that chimney.
Have absolutely no idea Nowty, but id guess not.nowty wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 5:48 pmI presume your SMA inverter has its Optitrac switched on and set for 6min (fastest) scanning interval with that chimney.
I think they have changed the name in their latest inverters to “shade management”.![]()
https://www.sma-sunny.com/us/using-shadows-effectively/
Well, just back down here in Cornwall, been upto the parents for a couple of days.resybaby wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 11:55 am Well have been peering under the panels from the driveway with the binos this morning and could clearly see three MC4 connectors dangling down into the channels on the concrete roof tiles, no doubt getting a good soaking every time it rains.
One dangler is right between panel one and two of the offending string.
Clambered up on the roof to try and sort that, only to find because the panels are so huge my normal sized arms arent long enough to reach the MC4's to lift and zip tie them off the roof, access only being from the one short panel end, and very little roof to work from giving its pretty much covered.
So have, as a test, wedged them up with a couple of lengths of timber to see initially if the problem disappears or becomes less frequent.
Fingers crossed.
Sadly a lot are made in China to varying standards so you cannot assume they are to IP67 unless you can verify your source.If a product has an IP67 rating, that indicates it is "waterproof."
The 6 indicates "complete protection against dust over extended time" as well as "protection against contact with objects greater than 1mm in diameter, such as a wire or a small tool."
The 7 indicates the system is "protected against short periods of immersion in water while under pressure between 15cm and 1m."
IP67 products offer a greater degree of protection than those with IP65 or IP66 ratings, both of which are merely "water-resistant."