Tucson’s Sun Is Great for Solar — Until It Isn’t
Tucson runs on solar. Between the residential arrays spreading across Foothills neighborhoods, the commercial rooftop systems on Speedway and Oracle, and the utility-scale installations stretching toward Marana and Sahuarita, Southern Arizona has become one of the most solar-dense regions in the country. And it makes sense — we get around 299 sunny days a year, and the UV exposure here is among the highest in the continental US.
But that same extreme sun that makes Tucson such a great solar market also accelerates exactly the kind of panel degradation that kills system performance. Hotspots, cell delamination, soiling accumulation, micro-cracks from thermal cycling — all of it happens faster at 105°F under unfiltered desert UV than it would anywhere in the country. The problem is, you can’t see any of it from the ground.
Desert Drones LLC offers thermal drone inspections for solar panels across Tucson — for homeowners, commercial building owners, and solar installation companies — using FLIR-equipped UAVs that detect exactly what’s failing and where.
What Thermal Drone Inspection Finds on Tucson Solar Arrays
A thermal camera sees heat, not just light. When a solar cell is underperforming — whether from a crack, a manufacturing defect, internal delamination, or shading from dirt buildup — it produces and retains heat differently than the healthy cells around it. That temperature differential shows up clearly in thermal imaging, even when the panel looks perfectly fine to the naked eye.
In Tucson’s climate specifically, we’re looking for:
- Hotspots — localized overheating in a single cell or string caused by internal shorts, bypass diode failures, or partial shading. These are fire risks and significant output killers.
- Cell delamination — where the encapsulant separates from the glass, creating moisture infiltration paths that accelerate degradation. Extremely common in desert arrays with high thermal cycling.
- String failures — when an entire series string stops producing, thermal imaging shows a cold row against warm neighbors, pinpointing the failed string instantly.
- Soiling patterns — Tucson’s dust and monsoon mud leave uneven soiling that shades panels inconsistently, creating mismatch losses.
- Micro-cracks — thermal stress fractures from rapid temperature swings, particularly on panels that have been through multiple monsoon seasons.
APS and TEP Connected Systems: Why Tucson Solar Needs Regular Inspection
If your system is grid-tied through APS or Tucson Electric Power, your inverter data tells you production — but it doesn’t tell you which panels are responsible for losses, or why. A system that produced 18 kWh/day when it was installed and now produces 14 kWh/day has lost 22% of its output. That gap might be one failed string, a handful of hotspot panels, or widespread soiling — and you won’t know without thermal inspection.
For commercial properties connected to TEP demand-rate structures, that kind of efficiency loss isn’t abstract — it shows up directly on your utility bill every month. And for APS customers with battery storage systems, degraded panels mean a battery that charges to 70% capacity on a clear day instead of the 95% it should hit.
We recommend scheduling thermal drone inspections for Tucson solar systems at least once a year, ideally in late spring before monsoon season starts. A May inspection gives you a clean performance baseline before July heat and monsoon moisture put maximum stress on your array.
What the Desert Drones Thermal Inspection Process Looks Like
The process is faster than most property owners expect. Here’s how a typical Tucson solar inspection goes:
Scheduling: We coordinate a flight window during mid-morning to early afternoon, when the panels have been generating for at least two hours and the thermal differential between functioning and failing cells is most pronounced.
Flight: Using a DJI drone equipped with a calibrated FLIR thermal camera, we fly a systematic grid pattern over your entire array. For residential systems, flights typically take 15–30 minutes.
Analysis: Every thermal anomaly is cross-referenced with visible-light imagery to confirm location and document physical context. We note severity classifications — minor soiling, moderate hotspot, severe cell failure.
Deliverables: You receive a full inspection report with annotated thermal and visible-light images, mapped anomaly locations by panel position, and recommended action items with priority levels.
Who We Work With in Tucson
Our solar inspection clients in Tucson cover a wide range of situations:
- Homeowners who installed solar 3–7 years ago and want to verify their system is still performing correctly before warranty periods expire
- Commercial property managers tracking ROI on rooftop solar across multiple buildings
- Solar installation companies who use drone thermal inspection as part of their commissioning and annual maintenance programs
- Property buyers doing due diligence on commercial buildings with existing solar arrays
- Roofing contractors who need to document panel condition before and after roof work
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a solar panel thermal inspection take in Tucson?
Most residential systems (10–25 panels) can be fully documented in under an hour including setup and wrap-up. Larger commercial arrays take longer depending on system size and roof accessibility.
Does my system need to be generating power during the inspection?
Yes. The panels need to be actively generating under solar load for thermal imaging to show meaningful temperature differentials. We schedule flights during peak generation hours — typically between 9am and 2pm on clear days.
Can thermal inspection detect soiling vs. actual cell damage?
Yes. Soiling shows up as a relatively uniform temperature difference across shaded areas, while cell damage creates sharp localized hotspots. The two look distinctly different in thermal imaging.
Do you inspect ground-mount solar arrays as well?
Yes. Ground-mount systems are actually easier to inspect by drone than rooftop arrays. We inspect both residential ground-mounts and utility-scale commercial arrays in the Tucson, Sahuarita, and Green Valley areas.
Is thermal drone inspection covered by my solar warranty?
Inspection costs themselves are generally not covered by solar warranties, but the findings from a thermal inspection can support warranty claims with panel manufacturers.
How do I use the inspection report with my solar installer?
The report is formatted specifically for use with solar technicians. Panel locations are mapped to your array diagram, anomaly types are described in standard industry terms, and severity levels guide prioritization.
Schedule Your Tucson Solar Inspection
If your solar system is more than two years old and you haven’t had a thermal inspection, you’re flying blind on system health. Tucson’s climate is hard on panels — but the right inspection schedule catches problems before they cascade into major output losses or roof damage from a failed panel.
Desert Drones LLC covers all of Tucson and the surrounding areas including Oro Valley, Marana, Sahuarita, Green Valley, Vail, and Rita Ranch. We work around your schedule and deliver complete reports within 24 hours of the flight.
Reach out at desertdronesllc.com to get a quote or book your inspection.