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    solar troubleshooting

    PV array underproducing vs. estimate

    Common symptoms: solar producing less than expected; low solar output; panels underperforming; production below estimate; kwh lower than quoted

    Stop and call a pro if:

    • PV modules are energized whenever exposed to daylight — never disconnect DC conductors under load (arc-flash)
    • do not open combiner boxes or touch damaged/hot conductors
    • batteries store lethal energy even when the system reads 'off'

    Step-by-step diagnostic flow

    1. Step 1

      Do you see or smell any arcing, burning, scorched or melted connectors, hot/damaged conductors, or a swollen battery?

      PV arrays are live in daylight and can sustain a DC arc. Any of these signs is an emergency.

    2. Step 2

      How are you comparing production — against a daily/seasonal estimate, or against a specific clear-sky day?

      Production naturally drops with shorter days, low winter sun, clouds, and high panel temperatures. Estimates are annual averages.

    3. Step 3

      On a sunny day around midday, is any part of the array shaded (trees, vent pipes, a new structure) or visibly soiled with dust, pollen, leaves, or snow?

      Even partial shade on one panel can drag down a whole string on string inverters.

    4. Step 4

      In your monitoring app, is production low across the whole system or only on one string / a few panels?

      Per-panel (microinverter / optimizer) systems show individual modules. String inverters show per-string totals.

    5. Step 5

      Around solar noon on a clear day, does the power curve flatten at a hard ceiling (a plateau) rather than peaking?

      A flat-topped curve at the inverter's rated AC power is 'clipping' — normal when an array is oversized to the inverter, and not a fault.

    Possible outcomes

    Stop — possible DC arc or battery hazard

    high confidence

    Arcing, burning smells, scorched connectors, hot conductors, or a swollen battery indicate an active electrical fire risk on an energized system.

    Safe next steps
    • Activate the rapid-shutdown switch if you can reach it safely
    • Keep clear of the array and equipment
    • Call your installer and, if there is smoke or heat, call the fire department
    Active electrical/thermal hazard on a live PV system

    Likely normal seasonal/weather variation

    high confidence

    Cloudy skies and short, low-sun winter days reduce output well below the annual-average estimate; this is expected, not a fault.

    Safe next steps
    • Compare output on a few clear days against the same season last year if available
    • Track production over a full month before concluding there's a problem

    Shading or soiling is limiting output

    high confidence

    New shade or a layer of dust, pollen, leaves, or snow reduces irradiance on the modules and can disproportionately cut string output.

    Safe next steps
    • Rinse accessible soiling from the ground with water — never climb the roof or use harsh cleaners
    • Trim vegetation that has grown to shade the array
    • Re-check production after the array is clean and unshaded
    What to document for a pro
    • Photos of the shading source and time of day it occurs
    • Which panels/strings the monitoring app shows as low

    Possible string or module/optimizer fault — call your installer

    medium confidence

    One string or a handful of panels reading low (while the rest are fine) points to a failed module, optimizer/microinverter, or string connection — diagnosis requires opening live DC equipment.

    Safe next steps
    • Do not open combiner boxes or disconnect DC connectors yourself
    • Note exactly which panels/strings are affected in the app
    • Schedule your installer for a service visit
    What to document for a pro
    • Screenshot of per-panel/per-string production showing the low units
    • Module and inverter/optimizer make and model
    • How long the underperformance has persisted
    DC array diagnosis is not a DIY task

    Need per-panel data to localize the loss

    low confidence

    Without per-string or per-panel monitoring it isn't possible to tell normal variation from a hardware fault.

    Safe next steps
    • Ask your installer to confirm whether your inverter/optimizers report per-unit data
    • Record daily kWh for a week alongside weather to build a baseline
    What to document for a pro
    • Daily kWh log with weather notes
    • Inverter make and model
    • Original production estimate from your contract

    Likely inverter clipping — usually normal

    medium confidence

    A flat plateau at the inverter's AC rating means the array is producing more DC than the inverter can convert; this is by design on oversized arrays and only trims a small amount of annual energy.

    Safe next steps
    • Confirm the plateau sits at your inverter's rated AC kW
    • If clipping is heavy and persistent, ask your installer whether the array/inverter sizing matches your contract
    What to document for a pro
    • Inverter AC rating and array DC size
    • Screenshot of the clipped midday curve

    Even system-wide shortfall — have your installer review

    low confidence

    A uniform shortfall with no shading, soiling, or clipping can come from an undersized install, an inverter running derated, or an optimistic original estimate — all need professional review.

    Safe next steps
    • Gather a month of daily production data
    • Compare actual output to the contracted estimate
    • Ask your installer to verify inverter settings and array configuration
    What to document for a pro
    • Monthly production vs. contracted estimate
    • Inverter and module models
    • Any inverter event or warning logs
    Diagnostic guidance only. If unsure, stop and call a licensed professional — gas, electrical, and refrigerant work is hazardous to untrained users.

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