Author: LEED Blogger

  • Energy Toolbase, AMS team up on AI-driven energy storage platform

    Energy Toolbase adds AMS to its offering, providing a unique solution for developers to design and deploy distributed energy resources with Energy Toolbase’s software-as-a-service for design, and AMS’s AI platform for operations. This effort enables distributed energy developers to run energy storage simulations and financial analyses on Energy Toolbase, basedRead More — Solar Builder magazine

  • Smappee Infinity delivers new energy efficiency insights for consumers, solar installers

    Smart energy monitoring manufacturer Smappee has debuted its new energy management system Smappee Inifinity at this week’s E-World 2019 in Essen, Germany. Tailored for Energy Service Companies (ESCOs) and OEM customers, Smappee Infinity provides in-depth, real-time energy insights to make informed and impactful decisions on energy use. Public awareness ofRead More — Solar Builder magazine

  • Smappee Infinity delivers new energy efficiency insights for consumers, solar installers

    Smart energy monitoring manufacturer Smappee has debuted its new energy management system Smappee Inifinity at this week’s E-World 2019 in Essen, Germany. Tailored for Energy Service Companies (ESCOs) and OEM customers, Smappee Infinity provides in-depth, real-time energy insights to make informed and impactful decisions on energy use. Public awareness ofRead More — Solar Builder magazine

  • Need for Speed: Inside the upgrades to the most powerful microinverter on the market

    Today’s solar systems require a more robust communication architecture to manage significantly more data points and in-field software updates, and this need was the driving force behind APsystems’s newest microinverter. Despite being the most powerful microinverter you’ll find on the market, the QS1 debuted rather quietly at Solar Power InternationalRead More — Solar Builder magazine

  • Delta issues recall of Eltek solar inverters due to fire hazard

    This recall involves Delta’s Eltek THEIA HE-t string inverters after the company discovered the capacitors can fail and allow heat to build up, causing the cover to eject with force from the unit and posing fire and impact hazards. The recalled inverters measure about 28 inches high by 14 inchesRead More — Solar Builder magazine