gonzo1
Member
- Location
- phiadelphia,PA
Hello all,i'm dotting my I's and crossing my t's on research for a future install.I am a licensed Electrician in the city of philadelphia,figured i'd get that out of the way before i get the warning for not being a pro.My question;I'm looking at going with a small
(under 2kw set up with future expansion) I like the enphase micro's, pretty cut and dry setup.I was looking at an Enphase white sheet and noticed that on the d/c side of the inverter it provides gfdi protection through integrated grounding does not even require attachment GEC although AHJ may still want too see it.I'm going to assume that GFDI protection is carried over to the a/c side.(please tell me if i am wrong on this)My concern with the Enphase m250 is that for arc fault protection it simply refers to the inexistance of a backed arc fault breaker,and therefore being exempt from needingAFCI protection.Now as per 690.11 Manufacturers of string inverters are now required to provide arc fault protection,now it would
seem to me that string inverters have that one advantage over micro's.So A:if one were to install an arc fault breaker from the trunk cable after the array to the output side of the micro's, in a proper NEMA disconnect enclosure of course ( assuming a 240 volt AFCI breaker exist)would that now dress the line load condition?I realize that i'm not "discovering the solution for arc fault protection for Enphase inc"I just would like to know why that wouldn't work. I understand that as per 690.12 the M250 is compliant with rapid shut down so that, along with GPDI protection is tipping the scales to a micro inverter install for me.not to mention don't like the idea of higherD/C voltages in my home,The only 600 volt d/c i want to be around is the Frankford El train.Thanks
(under 2kw set up with future expansion) I like the enphase micro's, pretty cut and dry setup.I was looking at an Enphase white sheet and noticed that on the d/c side of the inverter it provides gfdi protection through integrated grounding does not even require attachment GEC although AHJ may still want too see it.I'm going to assume that GFDI protection is carried over to the a/c side.(please tell me if i am wrong on this)My concern with the Enphase m250 is that for arc fault protection it simply refers to the inexistance of a backed arc fault breaker,and therefore being exempt from needingAFCI protection.Now as per 690.11 Manufacturers of string inverters are now required to provide arc fault protection,now it would
seem to me that string inverters have that one advantage over micro's.So A:if one were to install an arc fault breaker from the trunk cable after the array to the output side of the micro's, in a proper NEMA disconnect enclosure of course ( assuming a 240 volt AFCI breaker exist)would that now dress the line load condition?I realize that i'm not "discovering the solution for arc fault protection for Enphase inc"I just would like to know why that wouldn't work. I understand that as per 690.12 the M250 is compliant with rapid shut down so that, along with GPDI protection is tipping the scales to a micro inverter install for me.not to mention don't like the idea of higherD/C voltages in my home,The only 600 volt d/c i want to be around is the Frankford El train.Thanks