Hi Eric,

It is 25 inverters on a 20A circuit, but only on 208 three phase. Each micro 
connects to the cable in an alternating way (L1/L2, then L2/L3, then L3/L1, 
etc.) so with 25 micros there are either 8 or 9 micros on each combination.

9 x 1.0 A x 1.732 (square root of 3) x 1.25 = 19.48 A = 20 A breaker

Cheers,
-Nathan

--
Nathan J. Stumpff
NABCEP Certified PV Installation Professional #091209-175
NABCEP Certified Solar Heating Installer #032412-14
Project Manager | Arctic Sun, LLC
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  | (907) 457-1297
www.reina-llc.com<http://www.reina-llc.com/> | 
www.arcticsun-llc.com<http://www.arcticsun-llc.com/>
[cid:[email protected]]<http://www.facebook.com/ArcticSunLLC>

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of SunHarvest
Sent: Thursday, October 03, 2013 10:52 AM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: [RE-wrenches] Enphase commercial

Hey Wrenches & Nick Soleil (with whom I worked at APS for a time I believe...),

I'm not familiar with Enphase commercial applications and am currently working 
through a commercial design. Enphase, on their M215 datasheets claim up to 25 
micros per branch, at 1.0A each, with each branch terminating at a 20A breaker. 
By my calculations, 25 micros at 1.0A each (25A*1.25=31.25A) need to terminate 
at a 40A breaker. Anyone know what I'm missing or know how the 20A breaker 
design gets past the AHJ?

Eric Stikes
SunHarvest
(530) 798-3738

<<inline: image001.png>>

_______________________________________________
List sponsored by Home Power magazine

List Address: [email protected]

Change email address & settings:
http://lists.re-wrenches.org/options.cgi/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org

List-Archive: http://lists.re-wrenches.org/pipermail/re-wrenches-re-wrenches.org

List rules & etiquette:
www.re-wrenches.org/etiquette.htm

Check out participant bios:
www.members.re-wrenches.org

Reply via email to