Author: LEED Blogger
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How Apex Solar Power streamlined its PE letter process with Vector Structural Engineers
Apex Solar Power is headquartered in tranquil Queensbury, N.Y., which is upstate close to Lake George and not too far from the Vermont line. Over the past two years alone, Apex has installed more than 3,000 home and business solar systems throughout the Northeast. Along the way it has learnedRead More — Solar Builder magazine
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How Apex Solar Power streamlined its PE letter process with Vector Structural Engineers
Apex Solar Power is headquartered in tranquil Queensbury, N.Y., which is upstate close to Lake George and not too far from the Vermont line. Over the past two years alone, Apex has installed more than 3,000 home and business solar systems throughout the Northeast. Along the way it has learnedRead More — Solar Builder magazine
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Wire you doing that? Top four solar installation wire management issues
1. Cross-mating Cross-mating, which refers to the plugging of connectors from different manufacturers (between modules to optimizers/microinverters, modules to field-connectors, optimizers to field connectors or field connectors to the BOS system) is one of the most common PV wiring mistakes. In fact, the EU-funded Solar Bankability Project’s Failure Modes andRead More — Solar Builder magazine
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Vision Solar opens two new locations on the East Coast as part of expansion plan
One of America’s fastest growing solar companies, Vision Solar, has launched two new locations in Reading, PA and Edison, NJ as part of its expansion plan. The company has invested about half a million dollars in capital towards growth and has hired more than 30 employees in the two new locationsRead More — Solar Builder magazine
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The Carolinas’ big solar day: 14 utility-scale projects selected for construction by Duke Energy
Bringing more cost-effective solar energy to the Carolinas, 14 utility-scale projects have been selected during an independently judged bidding process – part of a 2017 comprehensive renewable energy law. Based on an independent evaluation process, Duke Energy will produce or purchase a total of 602 megawatts (MW) of renewable energyRead More — Solar Builder magazine