Posts Tagged ‘toby schmidt’

A week in the life: Toby Schmidt, Creative Energies Project Manager

Monday, March 15th, 2010

By Scott Kane
3/13/2010

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Each year, somewhere around the beginning of March, things at Creative Energies get busy. Well, if Creative Energies is busy that means Toby Schmidt, Co-Owner and project manager, is going full speed. This is what he did last week:

Monday:
6am start. Fort Washakie Entrepreneurs Center PV installation. Load 40 solar panels and the solar mounting rack in the CE work truck. Toby, Dan Kilcoyne (Electrician) and Curtis Tronlone (solar and geothermal installer) arrive on site and spend the day building three solar mounting structures and installing 40 Evergreen ES-A 205 modules on a flat roof of a great looking new commercial building. Beautiful day. Done by 5pm. The solar array looks great. Dan will go back to complete the electrical work.


Tuesday:
6 am start. 10 kilowatt residential PV solar installation near Cody. Load up 45 Sunpower solar modules and rack material on a truck and trailer. Drive three hours, again with Dan and Curtis. Today’s solar install is on a 8/12 pitch roof. Fall protection equipment slows the pace of work but that’s what it takes to put solar on a roof with an appropriately steep pitch. The work gets harder when the snow started to fall. An inch or two of snow complicates work on a steep roof. According to Dan, the last half hour of work took three hours. Once again, a great looking solar array installed in one go, though this time the finish was in the dark. Again, Dan will go back to do the remaining electrical work.

Wednesday:
Toby and Curtis switch gears from solar to geothermal. They travel to Sundance, WY to continue work on an ongoing geothermal project. We are installing both solar and a geothermal loop field at the Northeast Wyoming Welcome Center, now under construction. After five hours driving to get there they stage our Bobcat skid steer, our drilling rig and our grout pump at the geothermal field site. Spring mud conditions prevented them from getting the vehicles to where they wanted but they made it work somehow. “Grouting” means injecting a precise mixture of silica sand, bentonite grout and water down into the full depth of each of our sixteen 200 foot deep geothermal bore holes. It is not a clean or quiet process. Done well, though, it allows the geoxchange field to capture or release heat into the ground efficiently.

Thursday:
More grouting. All day. Lots of mud and sand. Drive five hours back to Lander. Arrive 2 am.

Friday:
6 am start. Project planning meeting in Mesa Verde, CO. Creative Energies has been selected to design and install a 76 kW solar installation at Mesa Verde National Park, CO. Toby’s list of skills is long and full of surprises. New to the list is flight. Toby and Phil Schneider (system engineer) meet at the Lander airport at first light. At 8:30 they are 500 miles south. A productive working session with National Park Service staff helps to map out a complex installation. Phil and Toby touch down in Lander just before dark.

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