Emit Solar | Home Solar Panels | Easy Ownership
Two houses on the same street, same-size systems, very different electricity bills. Here’s what actually drives solar production – and how to make sure your home is set up to win.
Solar panels aren’t simply bolted to a roof and left to do their thing. They’re wired together in groups called strings – and how those strings are planned makes a surprisingly big difference to how much electricity you generate.
String A – consistent
Same tilt & direction -> Peak Output
String B – mismatched
One shaded panel drags the whole string
Think of a string like a team: it performs at the level of its slowest member. Every panel in a string should face the same direction and sit at the same angle so they all receive sunlight at the same time. When that happens, the string works as one powerful unit.
A well-planned installation can generate noticeably more electricity from the exact same number of panels as a poorly-planned one. The hardware is the same – the difference is in the design.
Every home has a unique roofline. When we look at a roof, we think in sections – each section being a flat plane that faces one direction at one angle. A simple double-pitched roof has two sections; a complex roof might have four or more.
Large sections are ideal: more panels facing the same way means a string can run cleanly. Smaller sections aren’t a dealbreaker, but they sometimes mean strings have to be split across surfaces – which can shave a little off performance. The good news is this drop is often small, and our engineers plan around it.
Before recommending any system, we map your roof in detail – identifying every section and designing strings that make the most of your specific layout.
Malaysia sits north of the equator, which means the sun spends most of its time in the southern part of the sky. A roof section that faces south catches the sun for the longest part of the day – and produces the most electricity.
South Facing– Sun hits it most of the day. Best choice.
East or West– Good morning or afternoon production.
North Facing– Receives the least direct sun still usable but less productive.
If your best roof space faces east or west, don’t worry – a well-designed system can still make excellent use of it.
A shadow falling on even one panel in a string can pull down the output of the entire group. This is one of the most common – and most avoidable – causes of underperforming solar systems.
Temporary
Perpetual
Certain panels come equipped with built-in bypass switches that isolate shaded cells within a panel, protecting the rest of the string from taking a hit. We recommend these for homes where some shading is unavoidable.
How your panels are tilted affects how directly sunlight hits the surface. The goal is simple: have the panel face the sun as squarely as possible. Tilt it too far away and the light hits at an angle, reducing the energy captured.
Acceptable (below 35°)
Too Steep (>35°)
In Malaysia’s climate, panels tilted below 35° sit in the sweet spot. Beyond that, the angle starts working against you. The good news: most Malaysian roofs naturally fall within the acceptable range – no special mounting required.
Installation Quality
Careful string planning turns the same panels into a higher-performing system.
Roof Sections
Bigger, consistent sections make string design simpler and output more predictable.
Direction
South-facing is best in Malaysia. East and west are solid. North needs careful planning.
Shading
Even small shadows matter. We site-assess every roof before designing a system.
Tilt Angle
Keep it below 35° in Malaysia. Most roofs hit this naturally – no extra hardware needed.
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