I’m a big fan of solar panels but the alignment could’ve been better!

    • @LovesDreamsOasis
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      802 years ago

      if I had to guess, probably the lack of proper alignment.

      • Rich Aten
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        62 years ago

        Ohhhhh… I thought it was going to be the chimneys apparently held in place with duct tape.

        • @Confuzzeled
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          112 years ago

          I think it’s lead cladding.

          • @nogooduser
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            52 years ago

            It’s lead flashing which I think is used to protect the joint between the chimney and the roof.

          • Rich Aten
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            52 years ago

            Haha, very well may be. I know nothing about that stuff. I guess I should have said “appears to be duct tape”. Blowing the picture up it is definitely not that. It’s definitely metal flashing of some sort.

            • @Confuzzeled
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              42 years ago

              Yeah I’m not exactly a roof/chimney sealing method aficionado either lol. Could be some nonsense my brain threw up.

          • @Huntersli
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            42 years ago

            It would really irritate me if I had to look at it for the next 25 year 😂

          • dekatron
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            22 years ago

            After being conditioned to seeing really infuriating posts on r/mildlyinfuriating, this one caught me by surprise lol. Wish more posts were like this.

            • @8to32characters
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              12 years ago

              I think it’s the “infuriating” thing. Like that word makes me think of anger. I can’t imagine actually getting mad about this, but I agree that a lot of “mildly” infuriating posts are really just rage inducing.

        • Phlogiston
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          32 years ago

          for me its the top left panel being partially shaded. thats going to really reduce its functionality.

    • eroc1990
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      11 year ago

      Based on the comment with the image, the alignment of those top two panels compared to everything else being uniform.

  • Shaded Cosmos
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    502 years ago

    My website after I fail again at CSS ^

    • @fodder69
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      142 years ago

      But they did on the other side? And holes are holes (he said) so all of them need to be sealed.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        It could just be the angle OP is seeing it from that makes it look like the right side is closer.

    • @abhibeckert
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      92 years ago

      They usually attach a steel structure to the outside of the roof, then they attach the panels to those.

      That should give them all the freedom they need to put the panels wherever looks good.

    • @jerome
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      22 years ago

      omg thank you.

      • partial_accumen
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        2 years ago

        The variable kerning is a really nice touch.

        Comic Sans or Papyrus font would have been a nice cherry on top.

      • @fodder69
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        32 years ago

        I’m not a deisgner and you pissed me off…

        • @KernelSpinlocker
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          11 year ago

          deisgner

          I’m not a designer and the two of you pissed me off.

      • @injury
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        22 years ago

        Add a stretched photo somewhere in there.

        • @dezmd
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          32 years ago

          …wait a second… are you just trying to get me murdered by a mob of angry designers?

  • nyahlathotep
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    2 years ago

    It does like a little annoying, but since I’m not a roofer or solar panel installer I feel like there’s probably a reason for this that I don’t know.

    • @Earthwormjim91
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      There is. They have to be installed on the rafters/trusses and the skylight is in the way of being able to put them all on the same rafter/truss.

      They’re usually 16 inches in center so moving over one rafter would put that row off by 16 inches. They probably have the panel installed as far to the end of the support track that they can so it’s only a little bit off instead of a full 16 inches.

      • verity_kindle
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        62 years ago

        Too credible and reasonable an answer, downdooted

      • @PutangInaMo
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        42 years ago

        I choose to believe this. Obviously whoever did this is a professional and there’s got to be a good reason it was done. All these keyboard solar installation critics are lame drama junkies…

  • @danc4498
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    152 years ago

    This is like adding an image to a word document.

    • partial_accumen
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      2 years ago

      "hi! I’ve added your picture

      spoiler

      piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiicccccttttttttttttttttturrrrrrrrrrreeeee

      next to the text you wanted!"

  • m3t00🌎
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    152 years ago

    ocd, you’ll like this

    • @Beliriel
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      32 years ago

      Look on the bright side. You can place the plunger right next to the stove and it has space to stand.

  • Snipe_AT
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    122 years ago

    hell, i think it’s cool. maybe the upper left set of squares could move right a couple inches, but they look good!

    • @cybervseas
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      22 years ago

      I mean, that’s exactly the part of it that’s mildly infuriating, though…

    • @cybervseas
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      12 years ago

      I mean, that’s exactly the part of it that’s mildly infuriating, though…

  • Snipe_AT
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    2 years ago

    i just watched this post get: 1.65k, then 1.5k, then 24, then 5, then 64, and now 5 upvotes… how?

    • StrikerM
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      142 years ago

      It’s a lemmy glitch happens a lot.

      • Snipe_AT
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        72 years ago

        thanks thanks. I just thought it was a bot swarm

      • Ghostalmedia
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        22 years ago

        Stupid lemmy. Making me think my posts are blowing up, when really it’s 2 upvotes. Just like my trash OC on Reddit.

    • @lawrence
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      22 years ago

      I think he is talking about the difference between the left and right window margins.

  • @scarabic
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    72 years ago

    I’d like to believe that we are in a transitional period with solar panels, and soon it will be more common for them to just be an integral part of the roof. However I don’t see much uptake for the companies that have tried offering such products. Has anyone seen a house with integrated panels?

    • @AlataOrange
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      52 years ago

      That sounds way more expensive and like it has way more points of failure if you live somewhere that occasionally gets hail, tornadoes, or hurricanes. I can only speak for those locations as that’s primarily where I’ve lived, but I would much prefer my roof to be a roof then to chance anything coming in.

      • @scarabic
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        32 years ago

        Well yeah I agree that when you try to meld two things into one you generally get something more expensive than both which doesn’t perform as well as either. For something as common and well established as roofing materials, it’s going to be very very hard to beat conventional roofs on price and performance while adding electricity generation. Though to be fair, conventional solar panels probably get ripped apart in a hurricane, too.

        • @AlataOrange
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          12 years ago

          My worry is less them getting ripped apart during a storm and more the potential hole they could leave behind due to their destruction. Any hole in a continuous surface is a weak point.

    • @fodder69
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      32 years ago

      Not gonna happen, house are insanely cheaply built these days.

    • @eleitl
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      12 years ago

      You will need overhead panels which can be walked upon. They are more expensive. You will also need to provide sealed gaps for thermal expansion.

    • @wabafee
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      12 years ago

      I think Elon’s SolarCity company did something like that but it failed because of inefficiency of the panels and just expensive to install. To be fair I think having this is better than no solar panels at all. I think this will remain common until those two I mentioned with SolarCity gets resolved.

      • @scarabic
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        22 years ago

        I agree. I have panels. They’re ugly as shit. But they help.

    • @gd42
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      2 years ago

      There are multiple companies that offer solar tiles (for example: https://terran-generon.com/), but they have lower efficiency, cost more and have more points of failure than solar panels. Another problem is, tiles usually stay on the roof for much longer than the average lifespan of a solar panel and it’s much easier/cheaper to replace solar panels than solar tiles (without retiling the whole roof).