bbartmasse r
Member
- Location
- Washington State
Hello,
So we are installing an Outback Radian as a grid tied with battery system along with Outback Rapid Shutdown System.
One of the components of the rapid shutdown is a ground fault detection interrupter breaker, that gets connected to all sorts of sensors.
So I go to turn on the PV and the breaker immediately trips. I check wiring, everything looks good as far as I can tell.
I call Outback Tech. We go through all the wiring of the system, seems good. He sends me up onto the roof and has me check voltages.
I see 70.3 volts between PV+ and PV-, 0 volts between PV- and ground, and 67.2 between PV+ and ground.
He tells me this is my problem, I have a short somewhere. So I check each string, 5 of them. Every string shows very similar if not identical voltage readings, meaning every string has a short. At that point I say no way. The likely hood of this is too small and on top of that I wired it all myself, and it was done cleanly.
At this point I had to leave so couldn't do a lot more.
Any ideas? Anymore tests I could do to see where the problem may be? My gut tells me its still a mis wiring issue in the equipment somewhere or a bad breaker. But the tech was convinced it was a short at the array.
thanks for any suggestion
So we are installing an Outback Radian as a grid tied with battery system along with Outback Rapid Shutdown System.
One of the components of the rapid shutdown is a ground fault detection interrupter breaker, that gets connected to all sorts of sensors.
So I go to turn on the PV and the breaker immediately trips. I check wiring, everything looks good as far as I can tell.
I call Outback Tech. We go through all the wiring of the system, seems good. He sends me up onto the roof and has me check voltages.
I see 70.3 volts between PV+ and PV-, 0 volts between PV- and ground, and 67.2 between PV+ and ground.
He tells me this is my problem, I have a short somewhere. So I check each string, 5 of them. Every string shows very similar if not identical voltage readings, meaning every string has a short. At that point I say no way. The likely hood of this is too small and on top of that I wired it all myself, and it was done cleanly.
At this point I had to leave so couldn't do a lot more.
Any ideas? Anymore tests I could do to see where the problem may be? My gut tells me its still a mis wiring issue in the equipment somewhere or a bad breaker. But the tech was convinced it was a short at the array.
thanks for any suggestion