Lack of imagination and can't be arsed when they have so many customers..I can't believe I am facing so much resistance from the installers in the north west.
Lack of imagination and can't be arsed when they have so many customers..I can't believe I am facing so much resistance from the installers in the north west.
They have been short-listed even if at some point they clearly forgot about me for nearly 2 months. I am very patient.Hi Bob,
is using rest-uk.com kit still your preferred solution for wall-mounted panels?
I see in another thread that wall-mounted panels are part of your installation plan
thanks
Panels are designed to withstand hurricane force winds. If you check specs you will see numbers quoted like 3000 Pascals ( wind pressure is measured in Pascals) that equates to about 3 tons. Your roof panels get exposed just as much, being wall mounted makes little difference. The modern oddity with roofs is wind coming over the ridge and edges of the roof literally tries to suck the panels off - ohh I say missus ( to be said in your best Frankie Howard impression)It was a possibility I started looking at as the gable end of the house is almost due south, but I had discounted it as not appearing viable, mostly due to wind concerns.
During a 20yr usage lifetime a wall mounted panel installation is going to get storm force winds often enough to make the damage or destruction of panels a possibility in my mind and I just didn't get that warm happy contented feeling that they would be secure enough to prevent being lifted off the brackets at some point!
Happy to be proved wrong though!
Schletter frame rails on roof hooks can have upto an unsupported span of 1.4m. So, the frame rails are strong. Drill some 10 mm holes in frame rails and use Rawl bolts with a stud to fix the rails to the wall ( that would be flat to the wall rather than at an angle) and you will be fine. No different to fixing say battens for cladding, which from what I've seen is probably far weaker as it relies on flimsy timber battens.tbh my gut instinct was more concerned about the mounting system's interfaces. Would the weak point be more likely to be the mounting system's connections to wall or panel?
Very creative solution, but I assume also not MCS compliant, right?I quite like a little challenge job, keeps my engineering brain working. In this site it was not possible to roof mount, and the cutomer didnt want to see the panels, or a canopy type array, so I built a frame below a stone wall, consisting of unistrut cemented in the ground, added tie bars to the wall fixed in with chemical reasin and then bolted the panels to the unistrut.
Bob, I've been trying to find an installer who will even entertain the idea (we have a big and unshaded wall that gets great sun). Lots of bluster about 'not sure it's possible, not sure it's allowed' etc. Please let us know what you decided to do with this, and how it worked out.Thinking about what you have done with those vertical panels. This is actually pretty neat. I can't believe I am facing so much resistance from the installers in the north west. The bizarre thing is that they don't even mention planning permissions or legal constraints which shows they have no clue. Fortunately, I have the answer (see at the beginning of this post).
MCS is irrelevant, there is no FiT payments for which you would need MCS.Very creative solution, but I assume also not MCS compliant, right?
Hi OddLionBob, I've been trying to find an installer who will even entertain the idea (we have a big and unshaded wall that gets great sun). Lots of bluster about 'not sure it's possible, not sure it's allowed' etc. Please let us know what you decided to do with this, and how it worked out.
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