Maybe access is something that is important.
In considering the probability of a failure, there is a lot to be said for having one of something.
If a central inverter has a probability of 1/1000 units developing a fault in 25 years of service, then you have a 1/1000 chance of you getting the one that dies and needs replacing inside of 25 years.
If you have 20 micro inverters which are twice as reliable as a central inverter, then each one presents a 1/2000 risk of a failure in the 25 years. But because you've got 20 of them, the chance of any one out of the 20 developing a fault is 20/2000, or 1/200... Not so good. For the micro inverter system to be more reliable overall (no failures in 25 years), each individual inverter would have to be 20 times as reliable as one central inverter. At 1/20,000 failures, if you have 20 of them, the resulting probability of a failure would be 20/20,000 or 1/1000. Obviously, the more micro inverters you have, the worse the failure rate of the system will be (a system failure being a failure of ANY one of its components).
Enecsys argued that a central inverter is a single point of failure and that having n inverters means that if a micro inverter fails you lose 1/n functionality in the system. That's true, but it still means going up on to the roof to replace it, rather than the loft, garage, or utility room to do the job.
The micro inverter system is more resilient, in that it can suffer some component failures without the "service" failing (where the "service" is providing some electricity reliably)... This is common design practice in IT systems, where multiple identical servers are used in a parallel cluster, rather than one super-computer. One member of the cluster can fail and the service (web shopping transactions, or whatever) can continue (at reduced capacity) until the failed server is repaired. It is the
service that is more reliable, as a result of the extra complexity of having more servers. Having more servers actually makes the likelihood of
something going wrong
more likely to happen, but it lessens the
impact of it happening.
The same applies to the Enecsys system. One module failing does not mean you have no electricity, just less than expected. If a system was specified as being "a minimum 3000Wp capacity, guaranteed for 25 years", an installer could build in some redundancy. If n modules with integrated inverters will deliver the 3000Wp capacity, but there is a significant risk of a failure within 25 years, the installer may decide that it is cheaper to install n+1 modules. That way, one could fail in 25 years and he wouldn't be called out to repair it (as the contract was still fulfilled, to deliver a minimum 3000Wp capacity for 25 years). The extra module may cost him £600 to install, but if it avoids a cost to him of at least £600 in a call-out to replace a failed module on a hard to access roof, then it would be economically viable. Of course, he could just install n modules and hope they all work for 25 years... But as you'll have now guessed, the more installations he does, the higher the total rate of failure amongst all of them will be... So what he saves today on not installing a redundant module in each job, he may lose in the future on wasted trips to repair failed modules under his service warranty and the cost of damage to his business reputation (from selling services that do not reliably meet the terms of the contract).
Or he may have long since run away with the money and tells the customer "Nuffing to do wiv me guv'... Talk to Mastervolt, it's their problem.". Heard that one recently
