I just SWAG'd a 30 KW system assuming the entire roof is covered (worst case) and that is ~ 100 panels. At full output, the system could be outputting 100 - 125a.
Not sure of the size you have in mind but that's as much as the roof can fit.
That's a "big ***" system and would cost a ton. Off the top of my head, $40k in hardware.
People are right about the 125% rating.
Note, I'm an "installer" and unless you are burning through an absolute ton of power OR you have some crazy deal the the power company will cut you a check at near-retail prices (not going to happen) - a 30KW system will probably never pay back in your lifetime. And a 30KW system that is oriented two different directions will produce less than a south-facing 30KW system at the right tilt.
So I am about to start a 48x30 detached and was planning on have 150A in the garage. (largest breaker I can get in existing house panel) Probably more than I need but that is another discussion.
I have 2400 sqft, air conditioned, fridge, kegerator, hot tub, water pump, multiple RV hookups. I weld. I'll never use the 90A that I have. It's very likely that running 150A to your garage will be the same wire as running 200A (off the top of my head). The economic point is right around 90-100 amps, after that wire starts getting more expensive. You have a long run, so you'll need to look at voltage drop - which means even bigger wire sometimes.
My question is that my detached roof is positioned so that theoretically each gable side would get morning/afternoon sun with zero trees around. appears to be a great setup for it.
You're 50% right. One side might be a great setup for evening, one side a great setup for morning. What is your actual compass orientation of your detatched roof(s)?
What is the pitch of your roof?
The ideal orientation is a single roof (slant roof) that faces south and can pickup sun morning through evening.
Note, I've got a 6KW system. It's oriented south. I removed the shade trees. It's on a 1/12 roof (not ideal pitch) - so it probably does 5.4 - 5.8 KW peak.
You would likely be much better off ground racking your panels, pointing them south at correct tilt. Again, I don't think the economics (payback) of a 30KW system will work, even correctly oriented, unless you're running something at super-large residential or almost commercial scale.
Here's the other thing - your solar power will essentially be "used" by your garage, if it is needed. If you ran 100A to the garage and had 30A worth of solar, you've really got 130A before you'd trip that main, at least under full sun full power conditions.
Around here, not saying this is true in your location:
I can tie solar in at a sub panel, including the garage panel.
Pre-wire requirements are that I have a physical disconnect outside of the building for both the grid and for the array. So you may want to pre-wire for that stuff.
Modern solar setups don't really require physical disconnects due to Rapid Shut-Down Technology that (I believe) is accepted by later NEC code books, but many jurisdictions don't keep up and may want a feel-good disconnects.