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Solar installations may be a scam--unless they are Tesla--unless they catch on fire
Two days ago Meet Kevin posted a video about solar scammers and how great and wonderful Tesla was, before further developments.
All hail Tesla! They introduced three package sizes, small for $7,581, medium for $15,162, and large for $22,743. Kevin keeps saying to not purchase panels unless your energy bill is over $200 monthly and to remember you do not receive the 30% credit until you file taxes. He shows that renting Tesla panels cost about as much per month as buying and making payments. Tesla announced that if you lease their panels you can cancel anytime for $1,500 to remove the system, which will be a loss. All hail Tesla! Except... Meet Kevin just posted a video about Walmart suing Tesla. I am not relying on other sources, my phone has recommended two articles that I have not read yet (new job and 10- or 11-hour days), but he showed quotes for all of his data. Walmart is suing Tesla over solar system fires--twenty-nine solar system fires out of 248 installations. Tesla inspectors determined that 28/29 had incorrect fire management. 29 had the wrong building plans 25/29 had broken solar panel modules More than half had faulty connections, increasing resistance and heat. Tesla employees complained they did not have proper training or equipment. He showed a $300 thermal iPhone attachment that he used on his own projects that Tesla did not have or at least was not using. "I'm nervous holding $75,000 worth of Tesla stock!" Tesla's attorneys sent out a letter three weeks before Walmart sued saying going to court was inevitable. Kevin keeps saying Tesla needs to do everything they can to keep an organization as large as Walmart happy and to do everything they can to avoid going to court, it is a horrible waste of time and money. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8i0looHbgXk |
I thought their solar was a huge ripoff.
Yeah a 3% failure rate is pretty awful. I'm doing mine for around 70 cents a watt. |
Lawsuit is over installations Solar City did before Tesla merged with them or had their own panel manufacturing.
This is about due diligence in the merger process, really. |
I was on my way to Climate Consensus to post this, but it's a better fit here:
eevBLAB #64 - Tesla Solar City Panels Are CATCHING ON FIRE! Not as much detail as the Meet Kevin synopsis, but he wonders what Walmart must be thinking about their order for 45 Tesla semis. I have room for a 3x24-32ft solar collector. I was thinking about a hot air system (plus the roof insulation it would provide). Might it be possible to duct air across the backside of the PV panels for space heating? |
If they ordered 45 then only 1.5 of them should catch on fire.
Heat is the enemy of semiconductors like solar panels. Any experiments involving heat and solar panels should be focused on heat removal. As the temperature goes up your volts and efficiency goes down. |
The fires may be a result of improper grounding, in the installation.
My Sunpower panels have a tiny failure rate - about 84 per million. The typical panel sold today is 300-400 per million. Failed panels get replaced under warranty, so there's that. |
Improper grounding?
Doubtful. Just connecting the panels to racks and grounding the rack would be sufficient, it would be against code. There are thousands of diy installs grounded exactly like that and they haven't failed. Tesla junk is just prone to bursting into flames compared to the competition. |
That is the only explanation that I have seen reported. How else could a solar panel cause a fire?
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South-facing concave skyscraper cladding? A stack falls over in a warehouse?
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Quote:
Or get an arc between 2 DC wires with a potential difference of a few hundred volts. Failure of a panel optimizer. Water intrusion. |
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