Roger440 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago On 14/03/2026 at 10:11, Bramco said: In true Blue Peter fashion - here's one we did earlier... Ours was all done with standard key clamp bits and some solar panel clamps. Can't remember who we used for the poles and clamps but we did work out how many of each length of pole we needed, so they were delivered ready to start construction. The poles in the earth are 1m long, whacked in by our builder for a flat pack of beer... EDIT - should have added that we set the panels at 45 degrees to maximise winter output rather than the 35 degrees that PVGIS suggested. The actual annual total for 45 degrees was only just under the PVGIS 'optimum' but output was shifted away from the summer towards the winter. Excellent! Thanks for that. Might have to copy that. Though with 22 panels, could still get expensive!
Roger440 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 9 hours ago, sgt_woulds said: Fair enough 🙂 Our customer was an Econutter who was eeking out every last watt. Eventually, even he only adjusted his array twice a year. End of October and end of April from memory. In the first year he changed it daily; his panels faced slightly east of East of South, if he laid them back in the late afternoon he captured a few more rays before the sun set. Like I said, 'Econutter'. You can afford to play if you are retired I guess! These days an automated single axis tracker would be easy to set up, though I did come up with a mad idea to pivot all 22 panels and then join together using car track rod ends ( i can get the really cheap). Thats probably the easy bit. Walking down to the array several times a day to adjust would wear thin rather quickly, so automation would be requitred. That gets complicated and involves electronics, so a non starter sadly. I think i will adopt the johnmo approach!
JohnMo Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, Roger440 said: I did come up with a mad idea to pivot all 22 panels and then join together using car track rod ends ( i can get the really cheap). Thats probably the easy bit. Walking down to the array several times a day to adjust would wear thin rather quickly, so automation would be requitred. That gets complicated and involves electronics, so a non starter sadly. I think i will adopt the johnmo approach! You just need to keep simple, otherwise you will procrastinate and never get any generation up and running.
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