Hi all! I have a plan for using as much of my chevy express' roof space as possible, and I want to know if you can find any faults in my plan/suggest alternate ways of solving this problem.
I have a Chevy Express. On the roof, I want room for a
1. Maxxair fan
2. Wood burner chimney
and then
3. Fill every last remaining inch with solar panels.
After looking at many different brands/dimensions of solar panels, I've come up with this optimistic arrangement for my roofs space:
Plans are great, but the reality is that the chevy express' roof isn't flat. Its curved, with the high point being in the center, and the outside edges are 3-4 inches lower than the center.
So my thought was that I could bolt/mount Unistrut rails as far out to the edges of the roof as possible, and then have cross horizontal rails to support the panels. I do have a few aspects of this idea that do concern me though.
Because the roof is not flat, I'd not only need spacers that are roughly 4 inches tall, but the bottoms must be cut at a slight angle to match the slant of the chevy express's roof. See cross section illustration:
As you can see in this cross section, the boxes are the unistrut rails on top of the rounded roof of the chevy van, leaving an awkward shaped gap that a traditional cylindrical-shaped spacer wouldn't be sufficient to fill.
So my thought would be I would need to get a spacer and cut the bottom of the spacer so that it fits the angle of the roof, so something like this:
So the pink object is a spacer with the bottom cut to accommodate the slanted roof angle, if that makes sense.
So before I embark on this quest to create a low profile platform for mounting solar on my awkward rounded roof I'd like your opinions on this approach. I have questions like:
1. Can you see any obvious issues with cutting custom spacers like the pink object for the sloped van roof?
2. Does anybody even know where I could buy spacers that are big and strong enough for my use case (> 3 inches long, and strong enough to support the weight of beefy unistrut rails + panels)
3. Are there better ways of achieving maximum roof space use on a chevy express? Have any of you solved this problem in a better way?
I'm curious to hear about how you've dealt with similar problems with awkward round roofs like the chevy express. Thanks for reading my post, I appreciate any experiences I can learn from on this topic.
I have a Chevy Express. On the roof, I want room for a
1. Maxxair fan
2. Wood burner chimney
and then
3. Fill every last remaining inch with solar panels.
After looking at many different brands/dimensions of solar panels, I've come up with this optimistic arrangement for my roofs space:
Plans are great, but the reality is that the chevy express' roof isn't flat. Its curved, with the high point being in the center, and the outside edges are 3-4 inches lower than the center.
So my thought was that I could bolt/mount Unistrut rails as far out to the edges of the roof as possible, and then have cross horizontal rails to support the panels. I do have a few aspects of this idea that do concern me though.
Because the roof is not flat, I'd not only need spacers that are roughly 4 inches tall, but the bottoms must be cut at a slight angle to match the slant of the chevy express's roof. See cross section illustration:
As you can see in this cross section, the boxes are the unistrut rails on top of the rounded roof of the chevy van, leaving an awkward shaped gap that a traditional cylindrical-shaped spacer wouldn't be sufficient to fill.
So my thought would be I would need to get a spacer and cut the bottom of the spacer so that it fits the angle of the roof, so something like this:
So the pink object is a spacer with the bottom cut to accommodate the slanted roof angle, if that makes sense.
So before I embark on this quest to create a low profile platform for mounting solar on my awkward rounded roof I'd like your opinions on this approach. I have questions like:
1. Can you see any obvious issues with cutting custom spacers like the pink object for the sloped van roof?
2. Does anybody even know where I could buy spacers that are big and strong enough for my use case (> 3 inches long, and strong enough to support the weight of beefy unistrut rails + panels)
3. Are there better ways of achieving maximum roof space use on a chevy express? Have any of you solved this problem in a better way?
I'm curious to hear about how you've dealt with similar problems with awkward round roofs like the chevy express. Thanks for reading my post, I appreciate any experiences I can learn from on this topic.