Was it a lightning strike? The line is good on top the roof and none of the panels appear to be damaged. It says it’s still charging the batteries, should I let it continue until I can get it replaced, or should I disconnect it immediately?
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Was it a lightning strike? The line is good on top the roof and none of the panels appear to be damaged. It says it’s still charging the batteries, should I let it continue until I can get it replaced, or should I disconnect it immediately?
Looks like a simple case of a bad connector. Its not lightning, just a high resistance joint in the connector. Things fail sometimes.
Fire (almost) usually because cable/connector has become hot causes the soot like that.
There are two reasons for hot cable: -
1. Undersized cable (or incorrect cable) for the amps.
2. Bad connection (either a bad crimp, poor/bad matching connector, or connector not home correctly)
Badly crimped MC4 or poor quality MC4 connector resulting in inadequate contact area between mating faces which manifested over time. If you have historic data recorded on the system you may see output getting progressively worst.
There should not be two conductors going into one MC4 connector as there appears to be. The solar input cable appears to be of very small cross section area and does not look like solar cable.
No strain relief on cable evident.
It would be useful to know the quantity and output of panels, battery voltage and complete model of MPPT in original post.
You should disconnect if you haven't already.
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