the-chauffeur
Member
Sorry for the cryptic title . . . couldn't think of a better way to summarise what I'm asking.
Setup: even number of panels split 50:50 E/W (house almost exactly E/W oriented). Hybrid inverter and batteries.
Long story short, we've got 4 more panels on the roof than our inverter can handle; they're not connected up right now. To move past that elephant, we chose to put them there in the knowledge we were over-specing(?) for a few reasons; aesthetics to balance out the roof (esp. street-facing side) and longevity/expansion given that we couldn't guarantee they'd be available in 5/10/etc year's time. Using a higher power domestic inverter isn't really an option at this point (for reasons) but knowing that inverter/battery technology is changing all the time, we're also considering the longer term strategy of connecting them permanently when tech allows.
So today's challenge is whether/how we could incorporate the currently dormant panels into the current system without overloading it using switching. For the majority of its uptime, the sun is either on the east panels or the west, with both sets generating but the non-facing side generating substantially less. What would be ideal is if we could turn off two of the panels from the non-facing side whilst turning on the two dormant panels on the facing side depending on where the sun is. Not so much of an issue in summer, but very much more desirable as a system 'feature' in winter.
For the sake of this example, the array is split 10:10 with 8:8 permanently powered. In the morning, we'd want a split of 10:6, moving to an afternoon split of 6:10.
I've seen lots of stuff online about folks doing clever things with inverters using Home Assistant (we're in the process of setting that up) but much less on the manipulation(?) of panels. I suspect that what we're trying to do isn't that hard if we have access to the panel cabling and timer switches. Obviously the timer switching would need to be set up in such a way that there's no possibility of everything being on at the same time but beyond that, we're not sure whether there are any other limitations/pitfalls we might be missing.
Anyone done this sort of thing before and/or fancy chipping in advice, guidance, warnings and so on?
Hope that all makes sense - and thanks in advance.
Setup: even number of panels split 50:50 E/W (house almost exactly E/W oriented). Hybrid inverter and batteries.
Long story short, we've got 4 more panels on the roof than our inverter can handle; they're not connected up right now. To move past that elephant, we chose to put them there in the knowledge we were over-specing(?) for a few reasons; aesthetics to balance out the roof (esp. street-facing side) and longevity/expansion given that we couldn't guarantee they'd be available in 5/10/etc year's time. Using a higher power domestic inverter isn't really an option at this point (for reasons) but knowing that inverter/battery technology is changing all the time, we're also considering the longer term strategy of connecting them permanently when tech allows.
So today's challenge is whether/how we could incorporate the currently dormant panels into the current system without overloading it using switching. For the majority of its uptime, the sun is either on the east panels or the west, with both sets generating but the non-facing side generating substantially less. What would be ideal is if we could turn off two of the panels from the non-facing side whilst turning on the two dormant panels on the facing side depending on where the sun is. Not so much of an issue in summer, but very much more desirable as a system 'feature' in winter.
For the sake of this example, the array is split 10:10 with 8:8 permanently powered. In the morning, we'd want a split of 10:6, moving to an afternoon split of 6:10.
I've seen lots of stuff online about folks doing clever things with inverters using Home Assistant (we're in the process of setting that up) but much less on the manipulation(?) of panels. I suspect that what we're trying to do isn't that hard if we have access to the panel cabling and timer switches. Obviously the timer switching would need to be set up in such a way that there's no possibility of everything being on at the same time but beyond that, we're not sure whether there are any other limitations/pitfalls we might be missing.
Anyone done this sort of thing before and/or fancy chipping in advice, guidance, warnings and so on?
Hope that all makes sense - and thanks in advance.