dont you start that,!There's no E in Scotch Whisky.Other, inferior, alcoholic drinks might spell it with an E in there somewhere.
good job there is no P in whiskey, isn't it? :slap
dont you start that,!There's no E in Scotch Whisky.Other, inferior, alcoholic drinks might spell it with an E in there somewhere.
Give it a few hours and it will all turn to P....................... :rundont you start that,!good job there is no P in whiskey, isn't it? :slap
I am half way between Liverpool and PrestonIts not the Grid ImpedanceIts not the DNO's Supply
Its the badly designed install
The installer was a Muppet and quite possibly still is a muppet
I suggest you get someone properly qualified and experienced in PV to give you a report for you to take this further and get it sorted at the installers expense
Including a formal written complaint to Napit and REAL
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Where did you say your were again ?
Good........... I was getting worriedcorrect. you are right, that is where you live,
@ Newmen is there RCDs on the sub board that will/can be influenced by the inverter@NewmanWhen you spoke to Napit did you get the name of whoever you spoke to who stated the install was ok with the PV going into a sub board
Can you refresh my memory of the conversation you had and ideally who you spoke with
@ProDave , I would say the inverter is a distance from the point, the DNO attached the voltage recorder ,"average below 253V" is still a bit vague though isn't it?It's supposed to be 230V + 10% / - 5%
so the maximum allowed is 253V
So just saying the average is below the limit doesn't tell us a lot. The measured average could be 252V and that statement would still be true.
While I agree the installation is at fault, the DNO are not actually helping prove or disprove what, if any, effect the supply impedance may be having on this particular problem.
I think Neal Cumberland (?) covers round this area anyway.@NewmanWhen you spoke to Napit did you get the name of whoever you spoke to who stated the install was ok with the PV going into a sub board
Can you refresh my memory of the conversation you had and ideally who you spoke with
using your earth fault loop impedance meter connect L to L then N to N set L N on display press test button,,, if you have a three wire meter conect the earth to N and L toL and N to N press the test buttonThe DNO would have measured at the service head, that's where there responsibility endsCan you tell us how you would measure the grid impedance ?
I dunno :CWhos Neal?
Heres some of the emails@NewmanWhen you spoke to Napit did you get the name of whoever you spoke to who stated the install was ok with the PV going into a sub board
Can you refresh my memory of the conversation you had and ideally who you spoke with
There is an RDC on the CU in the shop which the electric goes through and there is a RCD on the barn CU where the panels/inverter is@ Newmen is there RCDs on the sub board that will/can be influenced by the inverter
No" earth" just grid/circuit L N impedanceI don't know a lot I must admit and every day is a learning curve for me....So is there a difference between your term of "grid impedance" and what a loop test result gives you?
You must enlighten me as to why I would not know why ?
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