Solar Prep

Thermographic Scanning vs. Traditional Inspections for Solar Prep

Why Your Switchboard Matters Before Going Solar

Going solar is not just about how many panels fit on the roof or which inverter looks best in the brochure. The real question is whether your existing electrical system can comfortably handle a new generation source feeding into it. If the switchboard and wiring are already working hard, adding solar can push them past their limits.

Before any solar designer starts sizing up your system, you need to know that your current infrastructure can deal with extra load, export, and the different ways power will flow through your site. If it cannot, you are more likely to see nuisance tripping that interrupts trading or production, hot joints and loose terminations that can worsen over time, increased fire risk in ageing or cramped switchboards, and inverter faults related to poor supply quality or unstable circuits.

At AZZ Industries, we focus on getting commercial, industrial, and retail sites across Brisbane and South-East Queensland ready for solar. We are not solar installers. Our role is to make sure your electrical backbone is safe, compliant and set up properly before you even sign a solar proposal.

What Traditional Electrical Inspections Can and Cannot Show

A traditional pre-solar electrical inspection is a very important first step. It gives us a clear picture of how your installation is put together and whether it lines up with current electrical standards. Typically, this type of inspection includes:

  • Visual checks of switchboards, distribution boards and visible cabling  
  • Tightening accessible terminations and checking for obvious damage  
  • Identifying and labelling circuits where needed  
  • Testing protection devices for correct operation  
  • Confirming general compliance with applicable electrical regulations  

This approach is good at picking up the obvious and the visible. For example, it can uncover non-compliant or damaged wiring, undersized or poorly routed cabling, overcrowded boards and clearly overloaded circuits, and poor or missing labelling that makes fault finding harder.

The limitation is that electricity does not always show its problems on the surface. Many faults start inside terminations or behind covers, where you cannot see the early stages with the naked eye. Some issues only appear when equipment is under real load, such as during peak business hours.

Even an experienced electrician can miss early-stage faults during a manual inspection if a joint only heats up significantly when the circuit is heavily loaded, resistance is starting to build inside a connection but has not discoloured or burnt yet, or components behave differently at different times of day or production cycles. This is where an infrared electrical scan becomes so valuable.

How Thermographic Scanning Sees Problems Before They Fail

Thermographic scanning, or an infrared electrical scan, is a way of looking at your electrical system through temperature instead of just through sight. A specialised camera picks up infrared energy and translates it into a colour image that shows hot and cold spots on electrical equipment.

In simple terms, extra heat usually means extra resistance. Extra resistance can come from:

  • Loose or poorly made connections  
  • Corroded or ageing components  
  • Overloaded circuits or undersized conductors  
  • Mechanical stress on terminations and busbars  

By carrying out thermal imaging while your switchboards and equipment are running under normal load, we can spot hotspots that a manual inspection alone would not reveal. This includes:

  • Warm or hot terminations inside switchboards  
  • Uneven heating across busbars and links  
  • Fuses, breakers or contactors running noticeably hotter than similar components  
  • Neutral and earth connections showing unexpected temperature rises  

Thermal imaging does not replace traditional inspections; it strengthens them. It gives deeper insight into how the system is actually performing in real time, not just how it looks when the covers are off. Because we can measure temperature rise, we can also:

  • Prioritise which issues need urgent attention  
  • Separate minor temperature differences from serious developing faults  
  • Track trends across repeat scans as part of ongoing maintenance  

For solar readiness, this means we are not guessing how close your system is to its comfort limit. We can see it.

Comparing Thermographic and Traditional Methods for Solar Prep

When you are planning for solar, each inspection method answers different questions.

Traditional inspection helps confirm:

  • Is the installation broadly compliant with current standards?  
  • Are circuits and protection devices sized sensibly for their loads?  
  • Is there obvious damage, ageing or poor workmanship that needs fixing?  
  • Is the layout suitable for adding new equipment like inverters and metering?  

Thermographic scanning helps confirm:

  • How are key components behaving under real operating conditions?  
  • Which joints or devices are hotter than they should be?  
  • Are any circuits or phases running closer to capacity than the others?  
  • Where are the hidden weak points that solar generation could magnify?  

The best solar preparation uses both. A combined approach allows us to:

  • Confirm compliance and design suitability through traditional checks  
  • Use an infrared electrical scan to test the system’s actual performance under load  
  • Build a clear list of remedial works, prioritised by safety risk and temperature rise  

Across commercial, industrial and retail sites in South-East Queensland, typical findings can include circuits running close to their design limit, especially during peak trading times, ageing switchgear that still works but runs hot and may not like extra stress, neutral bars and main connections with elevated temperatures, and hotspots that could worsen once solar starts exporting power back through the board.

Fixing these before you engage a solar installer means fewer surprises during design and fewer call-backs once the system is live.

Safety, Compliance and Long-Term Reliability Benefits

Adding solar should improve your energy position, not increase your risk. When we catch thermal faults early, you reduce the chance of:

  • Electrical fires from overheated connections  
  • Damage to switchboards, cabling and sensitive equipment  
  • Unplanned shutdowns right in the middle of trading or production  

For sites where downtime is expensive or disruptive, that peace of mind matters just as much as the energy savings you are chasing.

Documented thermographic reports also support your broader obligations and records. They can:

  • Form part of your regular electrical maintenance history  
  • Help show insurers that you are taking reasonable steps to manage electrical risk  
  • Support your workplace safety responsibilities by demonstrating active risk management  

In Queensland, expectations around electrical safety and maintenance are not going away. Regular inspections, including periodic infrared electrical scans, support stable long-term solar performance. When your switchboard is healthy, inverters generally have a better time, and you are less likely to be dealing with nuisance trips or unexplained faults months after the solar system goes in.

Your Next Step Before Calling the Solar Company

If you are serious about going solar, the sensible first move is to confirm that your existing electrical infrastructure is ready for the change. A combined traditional inspection and thermographic scan gives a clear, practical picture of:

  • The condition of your switchboards and major distribution points  
  • How your circuits and protection devices behave under real load  
  • What work, if any, is needed to make your site genuinely solar-ready  

At AZZ Industries, our focus is on independent pre-solar electrical assessments and any remedial work needed to make sites safe and suitable. We do not install solar systems, and we are not trying to compete with solar companies. Our role is to help you get your electrical house in order so that, when you do engage a solar installer, your switchboards, cabling and protection devices are already prepared, compliant and ready to support the investment you are about to make.

Protect Your Electrical System With Expert Thermal Scanning Today

If you are concerned about hidden faults or potential fire risks in your switchboards and wiring, we can help you find issues before they become costly breakdowns. Our team at AZZ Industries can carry out a detailed infrared electrical scan to pinpoint hotspots and safety risks with minimal disruption to your operations. To discuss your site or arrange a booking, simply contact us and we will walk you through the next steps.