Good afternoon,
We run a small campsite and had the great idea of purchasing solar panels and fitting them to a shed roof to save on our electric bill. We now have 32 x JA Solar 380w panels sat ready to install.
From what I understand is that because we have a single phase supply we need to contact the DNO for a G99 application to see what they will allow us to feed back the grid.
What I’m wondering is, rather than applying for G99 could we install all 32 panels and just have a limiter fitted that would only allow 3.68kW to be fed back to the grid and we could therefore just notify the DNO with a G98 form?
What would happen with the excess electric that is generated, can it just be dumped? I guess we could install batteries that would be charged up during the day by the solar array and then used overnight but I read mixed information about battery storage not being up to it at the moment and then what size to go for?
Should we be looking to go off-grid so that the house and campsite run from batteries and we use the electric supply to keep the batteries charged (like a generator connection I’ve seen on inverters) – would this be a better way to go?
Thanks for any advice, I know we’ve probably gone about this the wrong way and should have gone through an accredited installer from the start, trying to find an installer to help now is proving to be impossible!
Mike
We run a small campsite and had the great idea of purchasing solar panels and fitting them to a shed roof to save on our electric bill. We now have 32 x JA Solar 380w panels sat ready to install.
From what I understand is that because we have a single phase supply we need to contact the DNO for a G99 application to see what they will allow us to feed back the grid.
What I’m wondering is, rather than applying for G99 could we install all 32 panels and just have a limiter fitted that would only allow 3.68kW to be fed back to the grid and we could therefore just notify the DNO with a G98 form?
What would happen with the excess electric that is generated, can it just be dumped? I guess we could install batteries that would be charged up during the day by the solar array and then used overnight but I read mixed information about battery storage not being up to it at the moment and then what size to go for?
Should we be looking to go off-grid so that the house and campsite run from batteries and we use the electric supply to keep the batteries charged (like a generator connection I’ve seen on inverters) – would this be a better way to go?
Thanks for any advice, I know we’ve probably gone about this the wrong way and should have gone through an accredited installer from the start, trying to find an installer to help now is proving to be impossible!
Mike