Vagabondrobb
Member
Hi people,
I posted on here a good few months ago (see Solar Predicament) regarding advice around MCS and a 10kw ground mounted solar array I built (naively hoping a solar engineer would do the rest). Upshot is that because I built the array I could not get an MCS qualified installer to finish the job (with G100, which is what the DNO offered), and Scottish renewables insisted that there was no way to G100 (or in any other capacity) without MCS. I considered switching to Octopus but they could not guarantee non MCS connection before investigating, for a fee of £250. They also required the G100 to be approved, costing me another £750. At this point I didn’t fancy parting with a grand with no guarantee of getting connected.
As a solution, Bimble solar (based in Brighton) designed a Victron ESS system that would run in parallel to the grid, using a smart solar RS 450/200, 2 x 4.8 pylontec batteries, a Cerbo gx and 2.4kw multiplus II. As it would generate below the 3.6kw threshold, it would not be subject to restrictions/G99 etc. Not ideal, but I will get plenty of power from the batteries, and anything over 2.4kw will be supplemented by grid. I will probably add another Multiplus II further down the line (and not tell anyone).
I’ve hooked everything up DC side and all seems to be working as it should. I now need to hook the multiplus AC in/out to the mains, and install the meter (which communicates with multiplus/Cerbo. I’m quite comfortable doing the DC stuff, but I’d rather someone qualified did the AC stuff.
The thing is I live in the middle of nowhere and all electricians within a reasonable distance have either let me down or don’t have any solar knowledge and are reluctant to do the job. It’s not a big job at all - the solar gear is mounted in the hallway right next to the main box.
I have a couple of questions:
A) if I cannot find an electrician (and I’m trying my damned hardest), is hooking up the AC something that could feasibly be done by someone fairly sensible and competent? I’m guessing the fact I’m asking the questions means no, but hey.
B) Can I earth the DC gear (inverter etc) to the mains earth? Panels are mounted onto timber framed structure, so I’m assuming they are ok. I read that some people spike them, but it’s probably not necessary.
The answer is probably that I need an electrician, but no harm in asking I suppose!
Sorry for being long winded,
Cheers,
Robb
I posted on here a good few months ago (see Solar Predicament) regarding advice around MCS and a 10kw ground mounted solar array I built (naively hoping a solar engineer would do the rest). Upshot is that because I built the array I could not get an MCS qualified installer to finish the job (with G100, which is what the DNO offered), and Scottish renewables insisted that there was no way to G100 (or in any other capacity) without MCS. I considered switching to Octopus but they could not guarantee non MCS connection before investigating, for a fee of £250. They also required the G100 to be approved, costing me another £750. At this point I didn’t fancy parting with a grand with no guarantee of getting connected.
As a solution, Bimble solar (based in Brighton) designed a Victron ESS system that would run in parallel to the grid, using a smart solar RS 450/200, 2 x 4.8 pylontec batteries, a Cerbo gx and 2.4kw multiplus II. As it would generate below the 3.6kw threshold, it would not be subject to restrictions/G99 etc. Not ideal, but I will get plenty of power from the batteries, and anything over 2.4kw will be supplemented by grid. I will probably add another Multiplus II further down the line (and not tell anyone).
I’ve hooked everything up DC side and all seems to be working as it should. I now need to hook the multiplus AC in/out to the mains, and install the meter (which communicates with multiplus/Cerbo. I’m quite comfortable doing the DC stuff, but I’d rather someone qualified did the AC stuff.
The thing is I live in the middle of nowhere and all electricians within a reasonable distance have either let me down or don’t have any solar knowledge and are reluctant to do the job. It’s not a big job at all - the solar gear is mounted in the hallway right next to the main box.
I have a couple of questions:
A) if I cannot find an electrician (and I’m trying my damned hardest), is hooking up the AC something that could feasibly be done by someone fairly sensible and competent? I’m guessing the fact I’m asking the questions means no, but hey.
B) Can I earth the DC gear (inverter etc) to the mains earth? Panels are mounted onto timber framed structure, so I’m assuming they are ok. I read that some people spike them, but it’s probably not necessary.
The answer is probably that I need an electrician, but no harm in asking I suppose!
Sorry for being long winded,
Cheers,
Robb