Hail and Wind Are a Package Deal

There’s a severe weather challenge that utility-scale PV operators face: hail and wind work together. Rarely do you find hailstorms arriving with low winds. This means utility-scale PV plants need robust, durable, and reliable protection against these tandem elements.

NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, issues a Severe Thunderstorm Warning through the National Weather Service (NWS) when their sophisticated sensors discover hail over an inch in diameter coupled with winds equal or exceeding 58 miles an hour. These severe thunderstorms, producing large hail and high winds, can quickly produce tornado-like damage.

These warnings happen often. More often than you think. And for you quantitative types out there, NOAA summarizes annual weather activity in incredible detail.

In 2018, they recorded 4,610 large hail events as part of their severe weather reporting in North America.

These factors are important for utility-scale PV operators to consider as the consequences of severe hail or wind can devastate plant operations. Severe weather risk mitigation, essentially preventing the damage to modules and the tracker platform, requires an effective strategic response to BOTH severe wind and hail.

 

Handling one without the other is, as they say, sub-optimal.

Array’s DuraTrack® HZ v3 is the only solar tracker on the market with a fully automatic, failure-free wind-load mitigation system that doesn’t rely on active stow, sensors, or electricity. This means that when severe weather hits, the passive wind feature automatically rotates modules to the safest position for high winds, locking vulnerable modules in the full-tilt angle. Additionally, authorized site operators have the ability to manually control the entire solar plant with software if a rapid response is warranted.

Surprisingly, solar trackers that depend on active stow are not designed to handle sustained wind gusts at high angles. During hail events, trackers that rely on active stow face real risk of wind damage if they attempt to position modules at high angles.

While many solar trackers stow at low or 0° angles during severe weather, the engineers at ARRAY have partnered with leading aerodynamic engineering firms like RWDI to study the effects of extreme wind and the merits of dynamic, flexible approaches to this complex issue.

For more information on wind risk mitigation, watch our recent PV Magazine webinar: High or low tilt angles for single-axis trackers in extreme winds – a different approach.

Wind and hail present a dual-threat challenge.  Solar trackers that place modules in a flat orientation during severe wind events paradoxically then place modules at highest risk of damage from large hail. Given that NOAA recorded over 4,600 severe weather events in 2018 with hail and winds over 58 MPH, an inflexible, uncoordinated response to a combined wind and hail event will inevitably increase risk.

Thoughtful PV plant management requires a coherent and aligned wind and hail risk mitigation strategy. Working together. Mitigating risk for hail while increasing risk for wind is an equation for eventual disaster. The engineers at ARRAY technologies have put thoughtful design into the DuraTrack HZ v3 to flexibly help reduce risk in severe weather of all types. Tested in the field for over 30 years, with quality components designed with a 30-year lifespan in mind, ARRAY trackers optimize uptime and plant ROI.

 

Hail Resistance Requires Wind Mitigation

Hail and wind are destructive partners. Insurance companies regularly combine wind and hail damage in the same policy. They do this because hail and wind typically happen at the same time. For utility-scale PV plant operators, having a sound, reliable strategy for handling both wind and hail is a basic requirement.

Reach out to us to learn more about how ARRAY Technologies can be your trusted partner in utility-scale PV and how our experience in wind and hail can be your advantage.

 

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Hail and Wind Are a Package Deal

There’s a severe weather challenge that utility-scale PV operators face: hail and wind work together. Rarely do you find hailstorms arriving with low winds. This means utility-scale PV plants need robust, durable, and reliable protection against these tandem elements.

NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, issues a Severe Thunderstorm Warning through the National Weather Service (NWS) when their sophisticated sensors discover hail over an inch in diameter coupled with winds equal or exceeding 58 miles an hour. These severe thunderstorms, producing large hail and high winds, can quickly produce tornado-like damage.

These warnings happen often. More often than you think. And for you quantitative types out there, NOAA summarizes annual weather activity in incredible detail.

In 2018, they recorded 4,610 large hail events as part of their severe weather reporting in North America.

These factors are important for utility-scale PV operators to consider as the consequences of severe hail or wind can devastate plant operations. Severe weather risk mitigation, essentially preventing the damage to modules and the tracker platform, requires an effective strategic response to BOTH severe wind and hail.

 

Handling one without the other is, as they say, sub-optimal.

Array’s DuraTrack® HZ v3 is the only solar tracker on the market with a fully automatic, failure-free wind-load mitigation system that doesn’t rely on active stow, sensors, or electricity. This means that when severe weather hits, the passive wind feature automatically rotates modules to the safest position for high winds, locking vulnerable modules in the full-tilt angle. Additionally, authorized site operators have the ability to manually control the entire solar plant with software if a rapid response is warranted.

Surprisingly, solar trackers that depend on active stow are not designed to handle sustained wind gusts at high angles. During hail events, trackers that rely on active stow face real risk of wind damage if they attempt to position modules at high angles.

While many solar trackers stow at low or 0° angles during severe weather, the engineers at ARRAY have partnered with leading aerodynamic engineering firms like RWDI to study the effects of extreme wind and the merits of dynamic, flexible approaches to this complex issue.

For more information on wind risk mitigation, watch our recent PV Magazine webinar: High or low tilt angles for single-axis trackers in extreme winds – a different approach.

Wind and hail present a dual-threat challenge.  Solar trackers that place modules in a flat orientation during severe wind events paradoxically then place modules at highest risk of damage from large hail. Given that NOAA recorded over 4,600 severe weather events in 2018 with hail and winds over 58 MPH, an inflexible, uncoordinated response to a combined wind and hail event will inevitably increase risk.

Thoughtful PV plant management requires a coherent and aligned wind and hail risk mitigation strategy. Working together. Mitigating risk for hail while increasing risk for wind is an equation for eventual disaster. The engineers at ARRAY technologies have put thoughtful design into the DuraTrack HZ v3 to flexibly help reduce risk in severe weather of all types. Tested in the field for over 30 years, with quality components designed with a 30-year lifespan in mind, ARRAY trackers optimize uptime and plant ROI.

 

Hail Resistance Requires Wind Mitigation

Hail and wind are destructive partners. Insurance companies regularly combine wind and hail damage in the same policy. They do this because hail and wind typically happen at the same time. For utility-scale PV plant operators, having a sound, reliable strategy for handling both wind and hail is a basic requirement.

Reach out to us to learn more about how ARRAY Technologies can be your trusted partner in utility-scale PV and how our experience in wind and hail can be your advantage.

 

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Tratando con el viento y granizo

Los operadores de energía fotovoltaica a gran escala se enfrentan a un reto meteorológico importante: el granizo y el viento, que van de la mano. Rara vez las tormentas de granizo van acompañadas de vientos débiles. Esto significa que las plantas fotovoltaicas a gran escala necesitan una protección robusta, duradera y fiable contra estos elementos en tándem.

La NOAA, la Administración Nacional Oceánica y Atmosférica, emite un aviso de tormenta eléctrica severa a través del Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (NWS) cuando sus sofisticados sensores descubren granizo de más de una pulgada de diámetro (2,54 cm) junto con vientos iguales o superiores a 58 millas por hora (93 km/h). Estas tormentas eléctricas severas, que producen granizo de gran tamaño y vientos fuertes, pueden producir rápidamente daños similares a los de un tornado.

Estos avisos se producen con frecuencia. Más a menudo de lo que se piensa. Y la NOAA resume la actividad meteorológica anual con increíble detalle.

En 2018, registraron 4.610 episodios de granizo de gran tamaño como parte de sus informes de clima extremo en América del Norte.

Estos factores son importantes para que los operadores de energía fotovoltaica a gran escala tengan en cuenta, ya que las consecuencias del granizo o del viento fuerte pueden devastar las operaciones de la planta. La mitigación del riesgo de clima extremo, esencialmente la prevención de daños a los módulos y a la plataforma del seguidor, requiere una respuesta estratégica eficaz frente al viento como al granizo.

 

Afrontar únicamente uno de ellos es subóptimo

El DuraTrack® HZ v3 de ARRAY es el único seguidor solar del mercado con un sistema de mitigación de la carga de viento totalmente automático y sin fallos que no depende de la posición de defensa activa, los sensores o la electricidad. Esto significa que cuando el tiempo es adverso, la función de viento pasivo gira automáticamente los módulos a la posición más segura para los vientos fuertes, bloqueando los módulos vulnerables en el ángulo de inclinación total. Además, los operadores autorizados del emplazamiento tienen la posibilidad de controlar manualmente toda la planta solar con el software si se requiere una respuesta rápida.

Sorprendentemente, los seguidores solares que dependen de la posición de defensa activa no están diseñados para soportar ráfagas de viento sostenidas en ángulos elevados. Durante los episodios de granizo, los seguidores que dependen de la posición de defensa activa corren un riesgo real de sufrir daños por el viento si intentan colocar los módulos en ángulos elevados.

Mientras que muchos seguidores solares se colocan en ángulos bajos o de 0° durante las condiciones meteorológicas adversas, los ingenieros de ARRAY han colaborado con empresas líderes en ingeniería aerodinámica, como RWDI, para estudiar los efectos del viento extremo y las ventajas de los enfoques dinámicos y flexibles para esta compleja cuestión.

Para obtener más información sobre la mitigación del riesgo del viento, vea nuestro reciente webinar de PV Magazine: Ángulos de inclinación altos o bajos para seguidores de un eje en vientos extremos- un enfoque diferente.

El viento y el granizo suponen una doble amenaza.  Los seguidores solares que colocan los módulos en una orientación plana durante los episodios de viento fuerte, paradójicamente, hacen que los módulos corran el mayor riesgo de sufrir daños a causa del granizo. Dado que la NOAA registró más de 4600 eventos climáticos severos en 2018 con granizo y vientos de más de 58 MPH, una respuesta inflexible y descoordinada a un evento combinado de viento y granizo inevitablemente aumentará el riesgo.

Una gestión inteligente de la planta fotovoltaica requiere una estrategia coherente y alineada de mitigación del riesgo de viento y granizo. Trabajar juntos. Mitigar el riesgo de granizo mientras se aumenta el riesgo de viento es una ecuación para un eventual desastre. Los ingenieros de ARRAY Technologies han diseñado cuidadosamente el DuraTrack HZ v3 para ayudar a reducir el riesgo de todo tipo de condiciones meteorológicas adversas. Probados en el campo durante más de 30 años, con componentes de calidad diseñados pensando en una vida útil de 30 años, los seguidores de ARRAY optimizan el tiempo de actividad y el retorno de la inversión de la planta.

 

La resistencia al granizo requiere la mitigación del viento

El granizo y el viento son socios destructivos. Las compañías de seguros suelen combinar los daños por viento y granizo en la misma póliza y lo hacen porque el granizo y el viento suelen ocurrir al mismo tiempo. Para los operadores de plantas fotovoltaicas, contar con una estrategia sólida y fiable para hacer frente tanto al viento como al granizo es un requisito básico.

Haga click aquí para saber más sobre cómo ARRAY Technologies puede ser su socio de confianza en la energía fotovoltaica y cómo nuestra experiencia en viento y granizo puede ser su ventaja.

 

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