Finally! Exactly what I wanted to see. I'm new into electrical work and I've been trying to find out if the junction box setup was literally just tied together with a wire nut or not. I couldn't find an answer to this for the life of me. Thank you!
If you are doing ground mount, is the ground positioned differently? I see you have that ground in the junction box, but where is that going? Do you take the ground to the combiner box? Or is the ground in the array not connected to the Combiner?
@@constructionhacks9293just curious, how not? I’ve been installing emphases for about 5 years and never seen it like this. If there’s a benefit, let me know
Nice video thanks
@@Hewagej thanks for your support brother!
Finally! Exactly what I wanted to see. I'm new into electrical work and I've been trying to find out if the junction box setup was literally just tied together with a wire nut or not. I couldn't find an answer to this for the life of me. Thank you!
@@XAngelxofMercyX thanks for your support!
If you are doing ground mount, is the ground positioned differently? I see you have that ground in the junction box, but where is that going? Do you take the ground to the combiner box? Or is the ground in the array not connected to the Combiner?
Ground goes to the combiner then the main panel ground!
How do I make this work for 120v outlets?
@@spotonndiyvids6065 you will need to get 120v micro inverters
I'm pretty sure those inverters are all mounted incorrectly. The should be placed bracket side up hanging off the rail.
There isn’t enough space for that!
@@constructionhacks9293just curious, how not? I’ve been installing emphases for about 5 years and never seen it like this. If there’s a benefit, let me know
@@catheuswilson5564 you can put them however they will fit!
Its not 220v its 240V! In the US we use Split-phase 120/240!
@@goodoleme 220 is a active term as the power fluctuates from 110-120 volts per leg making it 220-240 as well! Thanks for your input!
Vertical filming? Really?