laika
Well-Known Member
Thought this would have been done to death but not much from the past year on the first couple of pages of google so....
Knowing my tendency to dither on anything involving fabrication (i.e. an arch or guard-rail hung panels) I'm considering, cognisant of issues with shadows from stays and guard rails, to buy a few smaller semi-flexibles to mount on the deck. Questions:
1. How are people doing the same feeding power through the deck? A thread from a couple of years ago was recommending deck glands which are all good tucked away under the pushpit, but seem a bit unwieldy and sticky-uppy in the middle of the deck
2. If you're leading wires across the deck to aggregate several into one gland (which I'm disinclined to do as it's a slip/trip hazard), how do you secure them down?
3. These things seem to come with about 1m of cable with an MC4 connector on the end: Are people cutting these off and connecting to a longer cable below deck?
Your experiences appreciated. I'm not expecting the output I'd get from properly angled rigids, but hopefully deck-mounted semi-flexibles will be good for *something*.
Knowing my tendency to dither on anything involving fabrication (i.e. an arch or guard-rail hung panels) I'm considering, cognisant of issues with shadows from stays and guard rails, to buy a few smaller semi-flexibles to mount on the deck. Questions:
1. How are people doing the same feeding power through the deck? A thread from a couple of years ago was recommending deck glands which are all good tucked away under the pushpit, but seem a bit unwieldy and sticky-uppy in the middle of the deck
2. If you're leading wires across the deck to aggregate several into one gland (which I'm disinclined to do as it's a slip/trip hazard), how do you secure them down?
3. These things seem to come with about 1m of cable with an MC4 connector on the end: Are people cutting these off and connecting to a longer cable below deck?
Your experiences appreciated. I'm not expecting the output I'd get from properly angled rigids, but hopefully deck-mounted semi-flexibles will be good for *something*.