jaggedben
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern California
- Occupation
- Solar and Energy Storage Installer
I'm not convinced that with lower labor costs for installation and longer product lives that string inverters are cost-competitive. Perhaps the up-front costs are lower for string inverters, but not the long-term costs.
YMMV. Still, as long as micro prices per watt remain about twice that of string inverters, it's going to remain a typical consideration. And often the up front cost is the decision maker, especially if the cost of money is high.
I believe the Y's are to be installed at each module, not at the very end of the string. If they are at each module, the performance of each module pair is controlled by the performance of the worst module in the pair. If they are at the end of the string, then the performance is the same as if they are going into a combiner box.
It's hard for me to understand how the overall system architechture would work if there were to be Y's at each module. They could not be put in series after that. The OP's numbers (and title of this thread) make it pretty clear that he was thinking of using them to combine strings.