Most wind turbines need a minimum wind speed of about 7 to 11 mph (3 to 5 m/s) to start generating electricity. This threshold, called the “cut-in speed,” is the point where the blades begin spinning fast enough to produce usable power.
Floating solar or floating photovoltaics (FPV), sometimes called floatovoltaics, are solar panels mounted on a structure that floats. The structures that hold the panels usually consist of plastic buoys and cables.
🔹 What It Means: This is the highest amount of power (in watts, W) that the panel can produce under ideal laboratory conditions, also known as Standard Test Conditions (STC). 🔹 Example: A panel labeled 400W Pmax means that under perfect sunlight, it can generate up to 400 watts.
White stone defects (WSDs) appear as milky-white micro-cracks or mineral deposits within the photovoltaic glass layers. Think of them like cholesterol in arteries - they gradually block sunlight transmission while increasing internal reflection.
The front glass layer is designed to capture sunlight as it does in a traditional monofacial module, while the back glass layer allows for the reflection of sunlight onto the rear-side PV cells.