I personally would turn it around the other way, look at your daily consumption figures and get enough battery storage to cover that plus a backup margin. Look at your peak consumption and use that to size the inverter. That creates a battery system that can run the house all day at off peak pricing. Now with the budget remaining get as much solar that the budget allows. There are times with companys like Octopus where they have 'saving sessions'. If you export to the grid during these times you get paid up to £4 per kWh (this years price), a considerable amount of money can be made if you have the capacity to store energy and discharge it into the grid at the appropriate time. On my system I bought energy at 7.5p kWh and sold between £2.25 and £4 giving me an income in December of £135. These grid balancing sessions are definitely on the increase and worth taking into consideration. During the good weather I export all what my solar generates with my house running on battery, again buying energy at 7.5p but selling my solar at 15p, not a lot but it does add up.
If I look at it this way then I think the 11kwh batteries are possibly about right. Our usage is less thn 9kwh per day based on the 3100kwh per year.
However, in order to take advantage of the various Octopus schemes we would need to make sure it can force discharge at the very least. The Givenergy ones are the only official partner for intelligent.
Hi Ollie, suggest you take a look at the generation you'll get from the S.E.W. PV system.
You can get an idea of generation potential for your location with PVGIS or easy-PV and see how little you'll get p.a. or p.c.m. to help you see if it gives a worthwhile dent in your electricity consumption.
PVGIS will just tell you generation, pcm, and depending on the years selected in the 'monthly data' tab will give a +/- yearly spread
easyPV has an in-built usage profile too which varies with time of day and time of year so also gives an indication of how much self-consumption you'll get. It will do a shading factor calculation too. You'll need you annual usage as an input.
With only four panels per roof then an inverter with a low startup voltage would be preferable, e.g. Fox ? However not many have 3xMPPT trackers, i.e. one for each roof and it's not a good idea to mix directions on one string. So microinverters by Enphase or SolarEdge seems sensible.
Rough sums, retail, not trade, prices, for 12 panels
Enphase IQ8 about £150ea, envoy ~£380 = £2180
Solaredge S500 ~£60ea + 5kW Solaredge inverter ~£1050 = £1770 (5kw from 12*420W and the 6kW version is an extra £300)
I might be missing something but Solaredge looks similar price to Enphase solution ?
Edit: playing in easyPV with longi HiMo6 425W panels indicates an upper limit of 11 panels per 'branch' for Enphase, depends on the model, some are max 10 per branch. Assuming 4000kWh p.a. usage the yield is 30-35% of usage, without a battery. Solaredge should take 12 panels. Depends if you real limitation is roof space or Enphase.
I will have a proper look at the PVGIS ( had a quick look before but was a bit baffled ) and easy PV as well.
The annual generation figures from the various quotes have been:
Quote A 4290 kwh (enphase iq7+, 420w panels ).
Quote B 4349 kwh ( tigos and solax, 410w panels)
Quote C 4663 kwh (enphase 1q8s 425w panels). We have virtually no shading.
Your comment about the 3 sides and not many 3 mppt inverters matches what I have been told elswhere and why we were leaning towards the enphase.
It is interesting that your sums come out with the enphase and solar edge being so close, the provider of quotes b and c said that the solar edge option came out even more expensive than quote C when he looked at it.
The final part where you say there is a maximum of 11 panels is very interesting indeed as both companies initially suggested 11 panels. Until I said that someone else had suggested they could fit 12 on a previous quote. I am now wondering if this is why, not a space constraint but a "branch" constraint maybe.
I must say that I really appreciate your time looking into it for me.
all panels are rated by STC, standard test conditions, it's worth having a look at the Californian state tesing of panels or PTC, which is suppossed to be more 'real world' and usually knokcs 10-20 Watts off a panel , howver 290w on a 420 w panel, that's roughly 30% - drivel! Even my 12 year old panels still hit within a few watts of their peak output from installation on a regaular basis. They might be nearer the mark if you are based in the Shetland Isles....
lots of manufacturers have 'training courses' which are free and mostly sales and marketing.
Tigos are enhanced bypass diodes, which all panels have, a completely different kettle of fish to solar edge and microinverters.
John is also correct, batteries offer greater financial savings than the solar panels do. Now I'm a bit biased in that I like solar for green credentials, but financially it's expensive to fit compared to batteries alone, plus risks potential roof issues if the fitters are 'not so clever'.
Interesting what you say about the undersizing of the enphase 1q7. it does make me wonder why they are sized as they are when most panels now are well over 400w.
I had heard this about the tigos and that they were not really very useful for shading because the panels have bypass diodes anyway, but in our case they were basically specifying them to create one string into the inverter instead of 3.
The plot thickens, I will go and have a play with the pvgis and easy pv.
Thanks
Ollie