Solar PV advice
Posted: Tue Oct 08, 2024 2:24 pm
Hi All....
I hope it's ok to start a new thread to ask for advice or any thoughts on my plans to get solar panels and battery storage installed.
We currently use about 12000kwh a year of electricity. We also have an EV charger installed for the EV. All our appliances are electric, only use gas boiler for hot water and heating.
I was hoping to take advantage of the night time rates of a tariff such as Octopus Intelligent Go to charge the EV and to fill the batteries up during the night at the cheaper rate and use the batteries to power the house at all other times.
House is 3 storey semi detached, with no access to the roof space (space was created into rooms and are plasterboarded to the roof). I've got a detached garage that I plan to house the inverter, batteries.
I intend to get a SunSynk 8.8kw ECCO hybrid inverter installed and have purchased 30kwh of battery storage (thanks Colin!) that is due to be delivered in the near future. This will be able to accept 10.4kw of DC input from the panels. I think this is a decent inverter and would be suitable for my plans?
I was thinking of getting a few solar panels installed on the garage roof while I get the inverter/batteries installed. The garage is a low pitched (12°) south/north facing and gets sun on both sides at same time.
Garage:
I have a quote for around £4000 (reasonable?) to supply and install the SunSynk 8.8kw hybrid inverter and 4x Aiko 625W (https://www.pluginsolar.co.uk/?product= ... anel-gen-2) solar panels with 2 horizontal on each side . This would give me a 2.5kw array and using PVGIS calculator would generate me approximately 1950kw a year. I suppose something is better than nothing!
I was going to wait a while before hopefully getting the roof of the house filled with as many solar panels as possible, to possibly generate enough to cover our whole electricity usage. I then started thinking what if I just did it now, see if it could be done and at what cost?
I had a play with opensolar last night and tried to fit as many of the Aiko 625W panels on the roof as possible:
I would lower the chimney stacks to reduce the shading as much as possible. The main roof is East/West facing and the other smaller ones are south facing. The east facing would be a 6.25kw array and generate approximately 4655kwh a year. The west facing would be 9.375kw array and generate approximately 6768kwh a year and the 2 small south facing roof (possible to be on same array so far apart?) would be 2.5kw array generating approximately 2378kwh a year. Any ideas how much to expect this to cost to add panels to the roof? The cables would have to be run down the wall to garage as no roof access from inside.
Total size of arrays, including garage, would be... 20.625kw and total generation would be approximately (calculator time!)... 15751kwh a year. So that's more than our usage, in the summer months , so would then hopefully be able to export the excess after filling the batteries up. Building up £££ to cover the cost of the winter months?
A question to ask the experts out there... Is that many separate arrays possible on the roof and would the SunSynk inverter be able to accept that many arrays? I think it has 2 MPPT and 2 strings on each MPPT (unsure what all that means!)?? I assume the SunSynk wouldn't clip as would never be generating more than 10.4kw at the same time with the orientations of the roof?
Sorry for the long post and thanks if you read until the end. Just hoping for someone with more knowledge than myself can say to me, either that's a load of bollocks and you can't do that... Or sounds a decent idea and go for it!
If anyone can offer any advice or recommendations to these plans that would be better than what I have come up with or any problems that you can envisage with anything I have said, that would be great.
Thanks for your help...
I hope it's ok to start a new thread to ask for advice or any thoughts on my plans to get solar panels and battery storage installed.
We currently use about 12000kwh a year of electricity. We also have an EV charger installed for the EV. All our appliances are electric, only use gas boiler for hot water and heating.
I was hoping to take advantage of the night time rates of a tariff such as Octopus Intelligent Go to charge the EV and to fill the batteries up during the night at the cheaper rate and use the batteries to power the house at all other times.
House is 3 storey semi detached, with no access to the roof space (space was created into rooms and are plasterboarded to the roof). I've got a detached garage that I plan to house the inverter, batteries.
I intend to get a SunSynk 8.8kw ECCO hybrid inverter installed and have purchased 30kwh of battery storage (thanks Colin!) that is due to be delivered in the near future. This will be able to accept 10.4kw of DC input from the panels. I think this is a decent inverter and would be suitable for my plans?
I was thinking of getting a few solar panels installed on the garage roof while I get the inverter/batteries installed. The garage is a low pitched (12°) south/north facing and gets sun on both sides at same time.
Garage:
I have a quote for around £4000 (reasonable?) to supply and install the SunSynk 8.8kw hybrid inverter and 4x Aiko 625W (https://www.pluginsolar.co.uk/?product= ... anel-gen-2) solar panels with 2 horizontal on each side . This would give me a 2.5kw array and using PVGIS calculator would generate me approximately 1950kw a year. I suppose something is better than nothing!
I was going to wait a while before hopefully getting the roof of the house filled with as many solar panels as possible, to possibly generate enough to cover our whole electricity usage. I then started thinking what if I just did it now, see if it could be done and at what cost?
I had a play with opensolar last night and tried to fit as many of the Aiko 625W panels on the roof as possible:
I would lower the chimney stacks to reduce the shading as much as possible. The main roof is East/West facing and the other smaller ones are south facing. The east facing would be a 6.25kw array and generate approximately 4655kwh a year. The west facing would be 9.375kw array and generate approximately 6768kwh a year and the 2 small south facing roof (possible to be on same array so far apart?) would be 2.5kw array generating approximately 2378kwh a year. Any ideas how much to expect this to cost to add panels to the roof? The cables would have to be run down the wall to garage as no roof access from inside.
Total size of arrays, including garage, would be... 20.625kw and total generation would be approximately (calculator time!)... 15751kwh a year. So that's more than our usage, in the summer months , so would then hopefully be able to export the excess after filling the batteries up. Building up £££ to cover the cost of the winter months?
A question to ask the experts out there... Is that many separate arrays possible on the roof and would the SunSynk inverter be able to accept that many arrays? I think it has 2 MPPT and 2 strings on each MPPT (unsure what all that means!)?? I assume the SunSynk wouldn't clip as would never be generating more than 10.4kw at the same time with the orientations of the roof?
Sorry for the long post and thanks if you read until the end. Just hoping for someone with more knowledge than myself can say to me, either that's a load of bollocks and you can't do that... Or sounds a decent idea and go for it!
If anyone can offer any advice or recommendations to these plans that would be better than what I have come up with or any problems that you can envisage with anything I have said, that would be great.
Thanks for your help...