dawsonnick
Member
I am perhaps looking for the impossible or, if not impossible, a system that would be too expensive to ever give a return on the investment.
I am connected to the grid and, with my 21 panels I produce more electricity over the year than I use (or I think I do based on forecasts).
I have a 3kW battery and two strings, one feeding a hybrid inverter and the second micro inverters.
My theory is that if I purchase an additional battery (perhaps 6kW which gives me 9kW) and using CT clamps and RJ45 to link the two strings and thus charge the batteries from the full 21 panels I could charge sufficiently during the day and, at night when the power is less expensive, top up.
In theory this would give me either free energy from solar or lower cost energy from off peak power and I would power the house in this fashion.
The above is my winter scenario as in the summer, I certainly generate more than required so will sell the excess to the grid and run from batteries - probably switching to a cheaper lower electricity rate with no off peak option.
In both scenarios, should the grid go down, I would like to seamlessly run from batteries.
This would include my electric heat pump in the winter.
I would also still like to be able to charge the batteries via solar.
I understand that the design of these systems is such that if the grid goes down, the system is no longer permitted to produce electricity so there would have to be some way of ensuring that the connection to the grid was physically off and controlling the inverter so that power was diverted to the batteries. This may have to be a physical switch.
Is this scenario achievable (or something along those lines) or am I daydreaming?
Thank you in anticipation
Nick
I am connected to the grid and, with my 21 panels I produce more electricity over the year than I use (or I think I do based on forecasts).
I have a 3kW battery and two strings, one feeding a hybrid inverter and the second micro inverters.
My theory is that if I purchase an additional battery (perhaps 6kW which gives me 9kW) and using CT clamps and RJ45 to link the two strings and thus charge the batteries from the full 21 panels I could charge sufficiently during the day and, at night when the power is less expensive, top up.
In theory this would give me either free energy from solar or lower cost energy from off peak power and I would power the house in this fashion.
The above is my winter scenario as in the summer, I certainly generate more than required so will sell the excess to the grid and run from batteries - probably switching to a cheaper lower electricity rate with no off peak option.
In both scenarios, should the grid go down, I would like to seamlessly run from batteries.
This would include my electric heat pump in the winter.
I would also still like to be able to charge the batteries via solar.
I understand that the design of these systems is such that if the grid goes down, the system is no longer permitted to produce electricity so there would have to be some way of ensuring that the connection to the grid was physically off and controlling the inverter so that power was diverted to the batteries. This may have to be a physical switch.
Is this scenario achievable (or something along those lines) or am I daydreaming?
Thank you in anticipation
Nick