Hi all,

I think there's a lot of experience on this list with PV in snowy regions.

I'm wondering if anyone has ideas and/or specific hardware/racking systems
to allow for easy "stowing" (in vertical or near-vertical position) or
"seasonal removal" of the ground mount PV modules for the winter (snow)
season?  Or ideas for a completely different approach to solving the
challenge I'm facing?

I'm planning a new off-grid system in the Sierra (around 6000') for a small
commercial community center facility.  The facility is accessible and in
use only during the summer months.  So, I want to optimize production for
the summer, and also avoid having the array destroyed by the heavy Sierra
snow during the winter.

To further paint the picture, here are some more details and constraints:

- System size: 23kW (likely 48 Silfab 490 mods)
- Must be ground mount (beautiful very tall trees completely surrounding
all roof options)
- Must be relatively low profile, visually.  Pole mount not an option
- Ideally one clean rectangular array 4x12 mods (13' x 90') or two 4x6
arrays (13' x 45')
- Array tilt: 10-15 deg (summer use only, must be low-profile)

There is a caretaker who has a seasonal crew, and could be trained to
"stow" the array each season as long as that process is relatively
straightforward.

At one end of the spectrum, it could be as simple as disconnecting and
un-installing all of the modules to store them in a stack underneath the
nearby deck for the winter.  I'd like to think there might be a more
"elegant" solution (and less labor intensive, and less wear and tear on the
modules over the years).  I wondered if there's a clever way to "drop" the
modules to a near-vertical orientation so they could remain in place during
the winter (some kind of hinge at the top and release at the bottom).  I
guess this might require individual rows of modules instead of one large
array.

(As a bonus, I'd like to keep about four mods (out of the 48) operational
through the winter for battery maintenance and a few incidental loads.
These could be vertically mounted on the south side of one of the
buildings, above the typical snow drift level, for example.)

Thanks in advance for any suggestions, ideas, things you've tried that
haven't worked, etc!!

Best,
Blake

-- 

Blake Gleason, PE | Employee Owner
Director of Innovation and Technical Excellence
O: 510-845-2997 x128
C: 510-867-5878

1035 Folger Ave.
Berkeley, CA 94710
www.sunlightandpower.com
License #326203
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