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Is it a metal membrane ( The outside is metal) or is it a metal decking with built up membrane?

Roof inspections work best on low slope roofs with no ballast, metal decking with insulation and a built up membrane.
Other roof types can be done, but above is the easiest to train on IMO.

You don't have to be so far after sunset.

Sunny day to solar load the roof
Book says 15 to 20 degrees temperature difference
No rain in the previous 24 hours.
No large areas of ponding (If present don't consider them other than perhaps flat or sunken areas)
Winds less than 16mph
90 degree to 70 degree viewing angle

Above is book guidelines.

Some anomalies are harder to interpret than others.
Some roofs are easy to inspect, but others with minor leaks may be harder.


If you decide to try this for a business, take a thermography class and think about having liability and EO insurance or a well written contract.

1696564525337.jpeg

Building in forefront is a very easy to train example. But there are a couple of areas where there is more to the story.
These anomalies are viewed easily even with a totally incorrect viewing angle.

The building in the background is a metal roof. The Decking is the membrane and it has seams sealed and paint.
 
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Thanks for the tips. I got tied up with concrete pour at my house so I couldn't make it out there. Attached are some Google Maps images of the roof. As far as insurance goes, I have liability insurance with AirModo and this is just a test run for my own purposes and not an actual gig for the company. I chose his roof because he said he knows of leaks in his roof so I want to see what it looks like. I'll take a thermography class in the spring but in the meantime just want to experiment, ask questions, and watch all the thermal videos out there just to get some time under my belt. I'm not taking on paid work before I know what I'm doing.

Capture 1.PNGCapture 2.PNG
 
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I have a question about this pic I took. What are the white squares on the left panel?
 

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jaja is right on. It's either an internal circuit or multi cell failures within one or more diodes. Determining if the anomaly is greater than 10 degrees higher than the adjacent modules would give you a better understanding. Bottom line, Houston, we got a problem
 
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Here is an update for the pic I posted. I had a chance to go and look at the panel up close. It appears the conductor trace has de-laminated and either shorted out or is getting hot.
 

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