I Nearly Walked Off This Solar Job.

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024

Комментарии • 250

  • @artisanelectrics
    @artisanelectrics  7 месяцев назад

    Request a quote from Artisan Electrics here - app.openquote.net/company/artisanelectrics

  • @mfx1
    @mfx1 Год назад +71

    As long as what you use to attach the the unistrut is MCS approved I can't see the issue, after all are the roof joists etc. that you would need to attach to MCS approved? No they're not. The unistrut is effectively an existing part of the house and it's clearly survived well, it's not even rusty. Seems to me that "MCS approval" is yet another industry body revenue generating scheme, it has no legal basis and it pretty much looks like you just replaced perfectly good steel strut with an almost identical aluminum replacement..

  • @black.phoenix.
    @black.phoenix. Год назад +107

    Wayne looks to be a very energetic and bright personality guy. More of him please.

    • @sRadio-xg4yr
      @sRadio-xg4yr Год назад +4

      Agreed, a natural on camera :)

    • @Ben-gm9lo
      @Ben-gm9lo Год назад +4

      Thumbs up for Wayne. Camera candy!

  • @notbadforasparky4791
    @notbadforasparky4791 Год назад +49

    Early PV Panels were mounted on Uni-strut as standard. There simply wasn't any specific mounting systems available.

  • @travisbro
    @travisbro Год назад +79

    i can tell wayne knows his stuff, plus he makes the content better

    • @hughmarcus1
      @hughmarcus1 Год назад +5

      I ran an asbestos company for 15 years. Wayne is doing everything by the book because he’s on video. Normally he’d nip up that ladder crack a couple of corners off the tiles & take a photo.
      All the white suit & mask stuff is technically required but in practice is seriously OTT.
      What that roof is, is fibre cement slates. The asbestos content would be between 5 & 8% & to quote the HSE the asbestos fibres are firmly bound within the material. Unless you start smashing the tiles with a hammer the risk is negligible.
      We used to provide safe systems of work for solar installers that allowed them to drill whatever holes were necessary on those roofs & ensure no debris was created.
      It’s actually not that difficult

    • @bullhurley-uv8ys
      @bullhurley-uv8ys Год назад

      ​@@hughmarcus1 can I pick your brain?
      What's the risks/ your views on pulling old rewireable fuses with asbestos liners?

    • @Trenchfoot1
      @Trenchfoot1 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@hughmarcus1 Hugh, was your company UKAS accredited?

    • @hughmarcus1
      @hughmarcus1 8 месяцев назад

      @@Trenchfoot1 No UKAS is only for the big boys. I looked into it, but it was going to cost £15k per year & economically unviable. The joke about UKAS is that the big boys subbed out the messy, dirty jobs to local companies like ours. 2 reasons, they didn't have staff with experience of messy demolition sites & they often had silly rules that said they didn't inspect anything more than 3 mtrs above ground level - not much use if you were demolishing anything more than a bungalow.

  • @nigelburton7408
    @nigelburton7408 Год назад +14

    So lucky the customer was congenial. Unfortunately the thumbnail suggestion that you might 'walk off' a job means you have demoted into the same catagory as all the rest of the cowboys. If you under quote as your survey was crap, your fault and deal with it with lessons learned for next time😊

  • @Leebobs1983
    @Leebobs1983 Год назад +50

    Get Wayne on more videos... what a legend

  • @martyndix2290
    @martyndix2290 Год назад +17

    We need more of Wayne! Get him out that office more often!! No disrespect to anyone else but he knows what he is doing and adds a new dimension to the content.

  • @steveeggleton876
    @steveeggleton876 Год назад +5

    Pair of ladders works wonders when checking out roofs and doing surveys and quotes, lot cheaper and more professional than a mistake.

  • @Deiphobuzz
    @Deiphobuzz Год назад +6

    That unistrut is just fine and was one if the first methods to mounts solarpanels. Looks like its all zinc coated? Why replace it with inferior aluminium..

  • @barrieshepherd7694
    @barrieshepherd7694 Год назад +9

    I'm not a structural engineer but couldn't one have been found to assess if the old unistrut mounting system was "fit for purpose" and adequate for the new panels? To my uninitiated eye it certainly looked robust enough.
    A quick look shows that MCS Rules fundamentally require good practice & fit for purpose.
    If it was my property I would have been content with an engineers assessment and if that was positive I would not have had all that additional roof work done.

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Год назад

      an engineer's assessment could be more costly than swapping the mounting system

  • @st200ol
    @st200ol Год назад +12

    The old rails would have been fine compliant or not, but I guess you needed to make the bill up to 25k somehow. ;-)

  • @pdavis2207
    @pdavis2207 Год назад +12

    I would not have insisted on replacing the unistrut unless the customer wanted to replace the existing roofing.

  • @NaydenSpirdonov
    @NaydenSpirdonov Год назад +1

    There is a shading from the chimney probably putting some optimisers at leas on the shaded panels will be good.

  • @ua420
    @ua420 Год назад +17

    That black skirt paddin looks cool but it should greatly reduce cooling (efficiency) of the pannels because of lack of air movement behind the pannels.

    • @shropshireladoutdoors743
      @shropshireladoutdoors743 Год назад +8

      Save me saying it should use mesh

    • @Cheradanine
      @Cheradanine Год назад

      It doesnt make that much difference. I had my panels integrated flush into the roof. On the hottest day last year there wass about a 20% drop in generation, but on most days it is barely noticeable. A lot less than the hassle of pigeons nesting under the panels!

  • @markdauncey927
    @markdauncey927 7 месяцев назад

    I'd have gone with the unistrut for several reasons:
    It looked pretty solid for much the same wind load.
    It avoided messing with what might have been asbestos slates.
    It avoided replacing drilled through slates.
    It would have avoided increasing costs for your customer.
    The unistrut fixing through the slatrs should havebbeen picked up even during a cursory in loft inspection.

  • @shaynemacdonald3051
    @shaynemacdonald3051 Год назад +8

    Who ever did the survey should of been sacked.

  • @feetachemail
    @feetachemail Год назад +18

    You have no right to complain. A simple visual inspection would have shown you all of those problems before you even started the job.

  • @camperchris
    @camperchris Год назад +3

    Wayne was a natural, we need more of Wayne :)

  • @JorgeAMG187
    @JorgeAMG187 Год назад +16

    More Videos of Wayne please

  • @stefanovanenio
    @stefanovanenio Год назад +1

    Always, always, always carry out a roof survey. Most roofs are going to be OK, but a roof survey would have highlighted the bodge job and saved the uncomfortable conversation. I must say though, 99% of clients who have PV installed are really decent people, so it does make the chat a lot easier. Great job guys

  • @darrenjlobb
    @darrenjlobb Год назад +1

    Your staff are a credit to you and your company Jordan. Always a good watch, thanks for taking the time.

  • @chrisgilbert9290
    @chrisgilbert9290 Год назад +8

    Can’t believe you haven’t got a uni strut socket….😮

  • @bigjd2k
    @bigjd2k Год назад +15

    The old fixings look totally over-engineered and bombproof and if not leaking, I'd just put the new panels on, after all it's been there for ages without any problems.

    • @gavjlewis
      @gavjlewis Год назад +7

      TBH I would have not even suggested removing the old panels. 2kW system to a 2.9kW system. 900w peak hardly seems worth it.
      Just replace the inverter with a hybrid inverter if the customer wants a battery system. If the customer wanted more solar then my first suggestion would be a couple of 455w panels on the garage roof @9:45.

  • @Pulpdiction1999
    @Pulpdiction1999 Год назад +8

    The optics of this, I nearly walked off the job because it was a bit hard. Wouldn't be calling you, we've already established you're a top dollar company but a bit of agro and you're thinking of walking off. My solar installers turned up at 9am and it was fully commissioned by 2pm, 14 panels across 2 roofs, not sure why it takes you days to fit a few panels.

    • @electrician_25
      @electrician_25 Год назад

      That's what companies that want millions of pounds do

    • @Jhongerage
      @Jhongerage Год назад

      Same here, except the weather was awful and the installers mate was off sick... So he showed up and did it single handed in the rain. All done before darkness set in, in October.
      There's a small premium I'd pay for slightly neater consumer unit wiring, but not 3 days labour worth.

  • @nikgray6635
    @nikgray6635 Год назад +1

    Live dc buried in the fabric of the building unprotected and unable to be isolated close to the source and the state of the roof after it was "repaired". If youre going into the solar game youve got a lot to learn especially if youre documenting it. Shambles.

  • @briandalrymple9986
    @briandalrymple9986 Год назад +2

    Man, you get it easy to instal and run the solar dc cabling. In NZ we have to run the DC cables inside a continuous solar rated pvc conduit when installed internally in the roof space/attic and internally within the house. This conduit is to be labelled “dc solar”, at regular intervals and is medium density walled. The electrical standards we use are predominantly ASNZS:5033 and ASNZS:4777 which are very specific to how things are undertaken due to the recognised issues and dangers involved in having uncontrolled dc voltages and currents from the panels to the inverter.

    • @buckshee
      @buckshee Год назад +1

      Our solar PV regs in the UK are still very minor compared to ac stuff.
      I watch these videos and sometimes I can pass a comment on stuff the guys could do better but also the flip side is I see things they do that I realise would be good to bring into my ways of carrying out what I do.

    • @briandalrymple9986
      @briandalrymple9986 Год назад +1

      @@buckshee I hear what you are saying for sure. In the electrical service there is room for continual improvement and, lotsa stuff that appears OTT too.
      I recon we only need two or three reps:
      1- is it electrically safe,
      2- will it kill anybody,
      3- will it start a fire….
      I am not intending to be critical by any stretch of the imagination.
      The wiring system that scares the whatsit out of me is the American 120volt system and needing to wire lighting in 1.5mm, and ranges capable of 60Amps.

    • @buckshee
      @buckshee Год назад +1

      @@briandalrymple9986 When it looked at the distribution boards they still use in the states it scares me, also their regs seem to come on a pamphlet and don’t get me started on wire nuts.

  • @Tom-2221
    @Tom-2221 Год назад +3

    Tricky situation Jordan - on the one hand this stuff would have been quite hard to spot prior to putting up scaffolding. But on the other hand I can see how the customer might find this frustrating. I think you handled it well though, communication is key and if they were aware of the limitations of the estimate you gave then fair enough.

  • @scottgordon1781
    @scottgordon1781 Год назад +5

    So what exactly was wrong with the existing rails ?

  • @ppdan
    @ppdan Год назад

    20:34 It's to lengthen the arc and make sure it is extinguished when switching off.
    The resistance of an arc is proportional to its length so having 2 contacts in series is roughly like having one contact that opens twice as much.
    Actually in this case there are 3 contacts to lengthen the arc (one on the negative and 2 on the positive wire).

  • @NordenEngineering
    @NordenEngineering 9 месяцев назад

    Galvanised unistrut was what was used in the early days on solar panels it will last years longer than the extruded aluminium rails your fitting but as you pointed out you had to use an approved product. I didnt like the drilling through the tiles although it was well supported underneath I couldn't see how it was water proof P.S. There are purpose built 17mm sockets made for unistrut.

  • @Trevor_Austin
    @Trevor_Austin Год назад +10

    If this system had an MCS certificate it would have been attracting the highest PV rates, 68p/kWh. Why forgo the generation and export tariff?

    • @andynoakes
      @andynoakes Год назад +8

      100% - I think the inverter had packed up, so that would have been a cheap swap over and keep the extremely generous FIT rate.

    • @VinoVeritas_
      @VinoVeritas_ Год назад +1

      ​@@andynoakes What about replacing the panels? Had they packed up as well?

    • @VinoVeritas_
      @VinoVeritas_ Год назад +3

      Good call. The Feed In Tariff scheme rules allow the replacement of certain equipment, but not all of it on a willy nilly basis.

    • @HowardBurgess
      @HowardBurgess Год назад +8

      This job doesn’t make much sense. In addition to losing the FIT payments, they’re only going from 10x200=2000W to 7x400=2800W. Even accounting for a slight degradation in performance over the years, seems a lot of expense (and waste) for an extra 800 watts.

    • @martinwhitaker5096
      @martinwhitaker5096 Год назад

      Indeed... Maybe move the inverter when replacing it so it's no longer in the attic and everyone wins.

  • @TommySco89
    @TommySco89 Год назад +59

    So you didn't carry out a proper survey, under quoted then made the customer pay for the extra work.. hardly what I'd call Artisan...

    • @mikethemask1525
      @mikethemask1525 Год назад +2

      😂😂

    • @asdfdfggfd
      @asdfdfggfd Год назад +10

      Never mind the standard approach for asbestos remediation like this is to leave them in place. This guy is a straight up con man.

    • @shropshireladoutdoors743
      @shropshireladoutdoors743 Год назад +12

      That's what happens when sparks think they are solar fitters that roof job is a days work for two pv fitters and a couple of days for two good sparks what a joke

    • @bobbybudd2248
      @bobbybudd2248 Год назад

      Fair point. I bet it wasn’t cheap

    • @cgh2467
      @cgh2467 Год назад

      Sounds to me like the customer had a choice.

  • @johncorbett1130
    @johncorbett1130 Год назад +1

    Second load of panels and kit, ££££££
    Bet he wished he had never gone for solar 😊

  • @timbrooks2763
    @timbrooks2763 Год назад

    Uni strut great tip, pop your claw hammer claw in the grove and a slight twist will allow your socket to drop on :)

  • @darren100880
    @darren100880 Год назад +10

    Wayne is awesome in front of the camera 👍

  • @irqanonimous3278
    @irqanonimous3278 4 месяца назад

    You should seperate the dc leads by atleast 5 cm, you might get a arch that will persist untill the inverter.

  • @shropshireladoutdoors743
    @shropshireladoutdoors743 Год назад +5

    Top tip don't get sparks to install solar pv just get a proper firm who know what they are doing me and my mate would have had the pannels of and new ones fitted in a day you don't need roofers just good pv fitters and and a good sparky

    • @bpomowe224
      @bpomowe224 Год назад

      Problem is that there's a panel boom, so lot of shoddy people out to make a quick buck. Hard to discern the bad apples.

  • @Jaxonmcguinness
    @Jaxonmcguinness Год назад +1

    Wayne looks to be a great addition to the team more please

  • @TonyRule
    @TonyRule Год назад +1

    8:34 Get better sockets - thin wall, like Koken. Also, you can just undo the nut behind the Unistrut on the threaded rod, spray a bit of WD-40 on the exposed thread on top, and the ones inside will spin off by hand.

  • @SW-gu1wy
    @SW-gu1wy 6 месяцев назад

    That bird protection makes it all look a bit like a spaceship 😂. But seriously just wondering about the restriction of airflow under the panel with this type of bird protection. Will the panels get hotter than panels without this protection, or even with the mesh bird guard? Thanks.
    Great videos 😊

  • @awesomedee5421
    @awesomedee5421 Год назад +5

    What is wrong with Unistrut for solar panel? That is exactly one of those things that those are made for. I've seen it at many installations

    • @haldo691
      @haldo691 Год назад +1

      I have 12 panels on my garage mounted on unistrut theyve been up nearly 3years and not escaped yet

    • @Nicolas-qb3yg
      @Nicolas-qb3yg Год назад +5

      @@haldo691, you are not meeting the UK Solar Mafia rule : next step spend £1000s more

    • @haldo691
      @haldo691 Год назад

      @@Nicolas-qb3yg yeah MCS is just another cartel if you don't pay for their "protection" you cant sell in their town

  • @waqasahmed939
    @waqasahmed939 Год назад

    08:10
    Tbf I think that's the same for a LOT of us end users. The way I see it I'm spending a few grand on the kit. I'd rather spend say a couple of hundred more on a proper job than pay less for a bad job, and then have to fix it anyway.

  • @TWMelvin1
    @TWMelvin1 Год назад +9

    Do you think it's fair to charge the customer we for couple major issues missed when quoting - possible asbestos and rails not suitable. Should have been checked in advance imo

    • @CastleKnight7
      @CastleKnight7 Год назад +1

      Do you think it’s fairer that the installer has to pay for these unforeseen major issues?

    • @Jay369
      @Jay369 Год назад

      Depends on how the conversations went really.

    • @nickbea3443
      @nickbea3443 Год назад +2

      @@CastleKnight7 I'm sure there was plenty enough Artisan margin to give away and keep the customer happy. Didn't anyone go into the loft to see the unistruts at quote time?

  • @sdgelectronics
    @sdgelectronics Год назад +1

    SPDs and associated connectors should be in a metal din rail enclosure, surely?

  • @UndercoverFerret404
    @UndercoverFerret404 Год назад +8

    How much do you lose on encapsulating the panels like that? They'll get quite a bit hotter, when there isn't room for any airflow.

    • @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse
      @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse Год назад

      Its to prevent birds nesting underneath though I guess it could be done in stainless steel mess too.

  • @stephenwabaxter
    @stephenwabaxter Год назад

    My sister just had a first time solar installation completed on her house. Apparently the preparation of documentation etc was quite taxing. Expecting that the payback period will be 1/2 that is was 18 months ago.

  • @SuPrAmAd101
    @SuPrAmAd101 Год назад +10

    Unistrut was the "done" way of installing panels back in the day and i have to be honest, i dont think that was a bodge job at all. In fact it would more than likely be stronger than the way youve now fitted them.
    easy to call other companies cowboys and bodge when its not your job.. Calm down Andrew, back in your box.

  • @aarbee_
    @aarbee_ Год назад +2

    waynes very popular eh 🤣 what a lad get him out the office more 😁

  • @Deiphobuzz
    @Deiphobuzz Год назад +1

    Full suit up for a little sample of something that might contain a substance that might make you sick IF you start grinding and snorting it.. im all for safety but this is just getting out of control..

  • @JCCarpentry
    @JCCarpentry Год назад +2

    Wayne’s a legend

  • @Cheradanine
    @Cheradanine Год назад +1

    It's no wonder Artisan prices are so high. There was no reason to remove those struts....all youve done is drive the costs for the home-owner though the literal roof.

  • @4addevelopments139
    @4addevelopments139 Год назад

    I was watching the new Peter Pan and Wendy with the Nephews last night. Didn’t realise Ruben was also an actor and playing the main roll. :)

  • @sukhi17
    @sukhi17 Год назад +1

    What a great video! Sad it ended! 😂 I wanted to see more!

  • @steviec1871
    @steviec1871 Год назад +2

    I can’t believe anyone over 50 would live long enough to actually save money on electricity especially if these things need replacing every few years..great video though…

  • @JustMeTalking
    @JustMeTalking Год назад

    22:00 .... and a whacking big chimney stack casting shadow over them all...

  • @Michael-xs5ef
    @Michael-xs5ef Год назад

    Wayne's piece to camera - very lucid - more please !

  • @johnfenlon458
    @johnfenlon458 Год назад

    Wow, That's Amazing to change new solar panels and install safety protection etc. Great work! Thumbs up! Cheers!

  • @oliverdransfield7304
    @oliverdransfield7304 Год назад +2

    Where’s Oscar?? He used to be amazing, so energetic! Great job Jordan

    • @adzie3229
      @adzie3229 Год назад

      Oscar was such a lovely lad 👍 💪🏼

  • @matthewchamberlain4571
    @matthewchamberlain4571 Год назад +4

    Reading the comments there seems to be some uncalled for comments. This video shows what can happen when you start dismantling an install. You can’t predict the future, should they on each job ask for tests of asbestos! I’d prefer the honest answer of this problem has arisen because of … we missed this because of … What would you like to do. The customer could of said no thank you! We don’t live in an perfect world and things unexpectedly arise from time to time!

    • @andrewrussack8647
      @andrewrussack8647 Год назад

      Yep. Risk balance. There is only so much time you can spend on a quote. Some you WILL get ‘not quite right’!

  • @RB-lt8kt
    @RB-lt8kt Год назад

    The DC cables are live when there is daylight even when cloudy not just sunshine. Nice to see proper scaffolding and safety barriers. Do the ladders need a side bar ? Harnesses ? what did the job cost ?

  • @lewispearson
    @lewispearson Год назад +2

    Whats the latest you guys have heard about the availability of the libbi? I'm hearing it keeps getting pushed back to address bugs.

  • @marymadigan9707
    @marymadigan9707 Год назад

    Very nice and tidy workmanship guys I’m just in awe of the work ye carry out and all the fantastic knowledge ye have collage really paid off ye know your stuff 😎😎🇮🇪

  • @MadMatty72
    @MadMatty72 Год назад

    Great job Wayne, what a pleasant chap. More Wayne I say.

  • @DorsetSaferRoads
    @DorsetSaferRoads Год назад

    can you do a video talking about pros and cons of the various inverter/battery manfs please! having a tough time making a decision! Especially on the subject of integration with things like home assistant

  • @simcax6087
    @simcax6087 Год назад +1

    These small systems are so not worth it, especially with that British weather. This upgrade/replacement probably never gonna pay for itself.

  • @producerdude
    @producerdude Год назад

    More Wayne please! He's a natural!

  • @SeanyyBoy_
    @SeanyyBoy_ Год назад +1

    Can't wait to see the Libby install mate! Hope you show all the connections. Are the Libby batteries AC coupled?

  • @jeffreyumeh8580
    @jeffreyumeh8580 9 месяцев назад

    Honestly rather than absolotely having to get the solar cables terminated I would just use an MC4 connector even if it's a perminate instellation, because if anything goes wrong down the line between with solar cut off switch to the pannels you can still fix that without having to go on the roof and disconnecting the solar pannels unless the problem is on the roof, it's not like you don't have space in the trucking for MC4 connectors.
    Like ideally should you never be working with live +50v conductors, sure, but life is hardly ever ideal and MC4 connectors let you deal with none ideal reality in a fairly safe way. Yes you should if you are already up on the roof not connect / disconnect the conductors on the solar pannel side, but making it so it absolutely has to be done that way to be safe is in and of it's self a bit silly.

  • @shuhel02
    @shuhel02 Год назад

    Siliconing the gap between the wall and trunking 👍

  • @ShortVersion1
    @ShortVersion1 Год назад

    I would've loved to know the lifetime production figures from the old system!
    Regarding asbestos (professionals disregard haha), just play dumb and scrap the stuff. People act like asbestos is weapons-grade plutonium. It's nasty stuff, but they legit used to use it for EVERYTHING. There were asbestos union workers, who would handle it all day without masks for years after they knew how bad it was. Kent cigarettes used to have asbestos filters...lol. My point in saying this, is that if you're a pro, do your thing, if you're a DIY, just mask up as best you can and get that stuff ripped out and tossed. Asbestos demo is more akin to second-hand smoking for a weekend, not smoking two packs a day for twenty years. Importantly, the workers who did handle it as a career definitely had long and painful death spirals. (source: working on asbestosis and mesothelioma cases and renovating old house)

  • @craiglaing2417
    @craiglaing2417 Год назад

    Awesome job guys 😎👌 You truly are Artisans

  • @2391Sparks
    @2391Sparks Год назад

    Best video yet. The way you protected wildlife the way you did and the way you protected your lads with the azzy testing is a model for how things should be done, take a bow young man… Normal sockets won’t fit in unistrut, you need channel sockets. Get the slimline round ones from Deltec, I do that shite everyday and I’m five years into my Deltecs and they’re still fine…Well done mate 👍

  • @waynenrich
    @waynenrich Год назад

    Good job as always Jordan and team

  • @edc1569
    @edc1569 Год назад +1

    What on earth is wrong with unistrut! Are the roof trusses mcs approved

  • @randomcamerajunk6977
    @randomcamerajunk6977 Год назад

    Thumbs up for Warrens barnet.

  • @MarcusNailor
    @MarcusNailor Год назад +1

    Wayne for the win! 🙌⚡

  • @connordines667
    @connordines667 Год назад +1

    Great video! Great install! 😊

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 Год назад

    you built a solar skirt around it, but how are the solar panels vented on the back?

  • @michaelorton6808
    @michaelorton6808 Год назад

    excellent workmanship.

  • @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse
    @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse Год назад +2

    Nice neat install but do you not think by design the panels should have a local means of isolation on each panel be it even in the roof space ,so the cabling to the main panel is not always live when future work is done on the installation?

    • @artisanelectrics
      @artisanelectrics  Год назад

      Never heard of doing it that way

    • @edc1569
      @edc1569 Год назад

      Add dozens of extra points of failure and arcing, not a great plan.

  • @alexevansuk
    @alexevansuk Год назад +3

    Cost to the client = 50k
    Return on the investment, they'll have sold up or died? 😂

  • @adamnoon9059
    @adamnoon9059 Год назад

    Great vid, would love to see more of Wayne on the tools!

  • @patrickchambers5999
    @patrickchambers5999 Год назад

    Bobs not my uncle, he's my brother. LOL

  • @mitch123456789
    @mitch123456789 Год назад +1

    I like Wayne. More of Wayne please. Wayne Wayne Wayne

  • @freddiewithers9617
    @freddiewithers9617 Год назад

    Nice work! Who is the manufacturer of those bird protectors? Also would help wind deflection. They look really smart

  • @tankumaat
    @tankumaat Год назад +1

    Waste of money and they know it!!!!
    So far north, in England and with chimney, insane. Where are side reflectors??? Spending twice as much for same or worse output is insane, pretty yes, rational no.

  • @ohgoaway3610
    @ohgoaway3610 Год назад +1

    Isn’t this a feed in tariff system? With a high FIT income and deemed export?

  • @RobertWheeler-t4z
    @RobertWheeler-t4z Год назад

    Think you need to explain the difference to Lee in screw types@4,20 . He is clearly removing counter sunk screws he calls pan heads. Not good

  • @Akz-xc1gu
    @Akz-xc1gu Год назад

    Wayne is the new Corey 😂🎉

  • @neilpowell9312
    @neilpowell9312 Год назад

    Do the DC cables and the AC cables not need to be run in seperate trunking? Either that or the 50x50 trunking you use here actually comes with an option to create 2 different compartments, therefore separating the cables as required?

  • @CAF7000
    @CAF7000 Год назад +3

    You need scaffold for this in the UK? No wonder the installs are so expensive, central Europe you don't need any certs to install mounting system and panels and most work is done from a ladder. Sparky just comes to terminate DC cables and everything downstream of that

    • @markdonoghue1013
      @markdonoghue1013 Год назад +3

      Life must be cheaper in Central Europe

    • @CAF7000
      @CAF7000 Год назад +1

      @@markdonoghue1013 for the most part yeah but baked beans are about double the price!

    • @bpomowe224
      @bpomowe224 Год назад

      @@markdonoghue1013 also shorter.

  • @paulos9304
    @paulos9304 Год назад

    Looking at the last 10 seconds of the video. The suns on the other side of the roof and your in total shade, didn't the owner want any pur on the other side.

  • @ha4641
    @ha4641 Год назад +1

    Thanks to the vids. At what point are you required to install optimisers?

  • @oninbridders
    @oninbridders Год назад

    Another inverter packed up.

  • @JasonSheehy
    @JasonSheehy Год назад

    What's normally done with the old solar panels?
    I realise they're inefficient by modern standards but are they re-used or recycled?

  • @timwild4433
    @timwild4433 Год назад +2

    massive waste of money changing that uni strut no point unless they were changing the roof.

  • @OMGitzEDD
    @OMGitzEDD Год назад

    what's happened to the old panels ?im looking to do a little solar back up for my garage and i don't want to buy all new gear if it doesn't work

  • @fredtheted2259
    @fredtheted2259 Год назад +6

    It wasn’t a bodge job, that’s the way these were fitted back in the day,Jordon’s sanctimonious attitude really is appalling

    • @artisanelectrics
      @artisanelectrics  Год назад

      Thanks

    • @edc1569
      @edc1569 Год назад +1

      It’s frustrating this idea it’s all crap if it isn’t what we we’d use this week. Nah it’s been on that roof for over a decade, it’s proven.

  • @markiansumaylo3532
    @markiansumaylo3532 11 месяцев назад

    May i know what is the brand of suction cup lifter you use to lift the panels?