where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
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- Posts: 578
- Joined: Sun Jul 18, 2021 11:50 am
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
Have you checked whether you are actually better off on the day/night rates rather than fixed single rate? Using figures for my area and supplier you are, but only by £3 over the 5 months so yours might be worth checking (lower standing charge for single rate also).
Getting a battery and moving more to night rate would obviously make the day/night rate more beneficial.
Getting a battery and moving more to night rate would obviously make the day/night rate more beneficial.
- SafetyThird
- Posts: 201
- Joined: Wed Mar 23, 2022 11:32 am
- Location: North Devon
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
Yes, I know how you feel about Givenergy but they seem to be building and expanding and apparently are evening looking at a UK base to build their batteries. However, I'm looking at a 20 year lifespan here in the current house and I'm geeky enough to be happy poking it around and tinkering that the Pylontech is attractive and modular and could be changed out without needing to change everything else as well.Swwils wrote: ↑Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:30 pm I wouldn't even bother with givenergy, it feels like a product you never truly "own" and you are one firmware update away from it not working.
Pylontech is kind of the oppersite, which is attractive to some people. We should probably organise a group buys especially the new 5000s.
If you can find an installer the new Huawei battery modules are interesting purely because each is independent so you can quite quickly build up a very large discharge rate if your DNO (and budget) has allowed it.
For inverter, I am a big fan of the cheap as possible strategy. Just replace it if it goes pop. Any monitoring can be done with superior standalone systems like emon, although I have grown to like lux powers hybrid, it's very simple and works well
6kw PV (24 x REC Solar AS REC 250PE)
Clausius 5-25kw GSHP
Luxpower Squirrel Pod
Pylontech 21kwh
Eddi Diverter
250l hot water tank with 2 immersions
2 x Woodwarm stoves
7 acres of old coppice woodland
Ripple Kirk Hill 3.8kw
Ripple Derril Water 3.963 kW
Clausius 5-25kw GSHP
Luxpower Squirrel Pod
Pylontech 21kwh
Eddi Diverter
250l hot water tank with 2 immersions
2 x Woodwarm stoves
7 acres of old coppice woodland
Ripple Kirk Hill 3.8kw
Ripple Derril Water 3.963 kW
- SafetyThird
- Posts: 201
- Joined: Wed Mar 23, 2022 11:32 am
- Location: North Devon
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
I did look into it but until recently so much of our usage was night rate that E7 made sense. Since having the GSHP installed, that's changed a lot so I'm looking at other tariffs along with things like a battery and more PV. I think having off peak will work well with the battery but there's different off peak tariff's too so plenty to get thinking about.Countrypaul wrote: ↑Thu Mar 31, 2022 3:32 pm Have you checked whether you are actually better off on the day/night rates rather than fixed single rate? Using figures for my area and supplier you are, but only by £3 over the 5 months so yours might be worth checking (lower standing charge for single rate also).
Getting a battery and moving more to night rate would obviously make the day/night rate more beneficial.
6kw PV (24 x REC Solar AS REC 250PE)
Clausius 5-25kw GSHP
Luxpower Squirrel Pod
Pylontech 21kwh
Eddi Diverter
250l hot water tank with 2 immersions
2 x Woodwarm stoves
7 acres of old coppice woodland
Ripple Kirk Hill 3.8kw
Ripple Derril Water 3.963 kW
Clausius 5-25kw GSHP
Luxpower Squirrel Pod
Pylontech 21kwh
Eddi Diverter
250l hot water tank with 2 immersions
2 x Woodwarm stoves
7 acres of old coppice woodland
Ripple Kirk Hill 3.8kw
Ripple Derril Water 3.963 kW
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
Nowty Towers runs 99.6% Off Peak, you just need a big enough battery.
And a big enough battery inverter.
And a big enough battery charging capacity.
And a 100A DNO fuse.
And a big enough battery inverter.
And a big enough battery charging capacity.
And a 100A DNO fuse.
18.7kW PV > 109MWh generated
Ripple 6.6kW Wind + 4.5kW PV > 27MWh generated
6 Other RE Coop's
105kWh EV storage
60kWh Home battery storage
40kWh Thermal storage
GSHP + A2A HP's
Rain water use > 510 m3
Ripple 6.6kW Wind + 4.5kW PV > 27MWh generated
6 Other RE Coop's
105kWh EV storage
60kWh Home battery storage
40kWh Thermal storage
GSHP + A2A HP's
Rain water use > 510 m3
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
You can have a smaller fuse into the house with an E10 tariff. The longest period you need to bridge on the batteries is 6 hours
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
Same here, only by fluke or SWMBO starting ironing when I'm up near the 4kW discharge limit will we touch the grid and that's rare as we both know to cascade events. 100A fuse is handy especially in deep Winter when you are compressing everything into the window. I am a 5 hour window and it does the lot. Peaked at just under 90A.
15kW PV SE, VI, HM, EN
42kWh LFPO4 storage
7kW ASHP
200ltr HWT.
73kWh HI5
Deep insulation, air leak ct'd home
WBSx2
Low energy bulbs
Veg patches & fruit trees
42kWh LFPO4 storage
7kW ASHP
200ltr HWT.
73kWh HI5
Deep insulation, air leak ct'd home
WBSx2
Low energy bulbs
Veg patches & fruit trees
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
I'm going to drop a bit of an idea just before i turn in for the night: happy to be shot down by the morning.
The main issue seems to be needing heat from the heat pump in the winter months, now in order to get that from the heat pump you need expensive batteries which you can charge up with some solar (any wind I don't recall?) or from the nasty expensive grid. you then exchange the stored electricity with a COP of more than 1 to get heat.
Question : is there advantage in a large (very large?) thermal store and a ground mount solar array to store some heat to assist the heat pump to get the required therms you need in winter, but also got the option to harvest some DC if you need electric and not heat.
Now i know direct heating some water or other media is a COP of 1 but the question i am grappling with is how much thermal store and solar panels can you buy for lets say the price of two pylontech batteries and does combining that set up with the HP result in a better COP for the heat pump and a better longer heat delivery period than "burning" the equivalent 4kWh from the two batteries? Also with an integrated thermal store you could use the WBS (assuming its got a boiler) as another heat input source ?
Moxi
The main issue seems to be needing heat from the heat pump in the winter months, now in order to get that from the heat pump you need expensive batteries which you can charge up with some solar (any wind I don't recall?) or from the nasty expensive grid. you then exchange the stored electricity with a COP of more than 1 to get heat.
Question : is there advantage in a large (very large?) thermal store and a ground mount solar array to store some heat to assist the heat pump to get the required therms you need in winter, but also got the option to harvest some DC if you need electric and not heat.
Now i know direct heating some water or other media is a COP of 1 but the question i am grappling with is how much thermal store and solar panels can you buy for lets say the price of two pylontech batteries and does combining that set up with the HP result in a better COP for the heat pump and a better longer heat delivery period than "burning" the equivalent 4kWh from the two batteries? Also with an integrated thermal store you could use the WBS (assuming its got a boiler) as another heat input source ?
Moxi
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
No amount of Solar PV in winter will cut it, it just wont.
Wind power will most of the time, but most of us need a share of a big one like the ripple wind turbines as one in our back gardens either wont get past planning permission or simply wont work because we live in an unsuitable place.
If you can get a cheap rate tariff which aligns with gas price (like Go, Go Faster, Intelligent), then a thermal store (heated with heatpump or immersions) or storage heaters is as good as gas for cost and usually (and increasingly as grid becomes less carbon intensive) less carbon than burning gas directly in a condensing boiler.
I know where your coming from because my heat pump wont cut it in the really cold times without extra heat from my storage heaters. Today quite a bit of excess heat from Solar went into my storage heaters but its end of March, not end of December.
I don't have a WBS but Joeboy now seems to almost get away without gas by using his and he's in a colder place than either of us.
Wind power will most of the time, but most of us need a share of a big one like the ripple wind turbines as one in our back gardens either wont get past planning permission or simply wont work because we live in an unsuitable place.
If you can get a cheap rate tariff which aligns with gas price (like Go, Go Faster, Intelligent), then a thermal store (heated with heatpump or immersions) or storage heaters is as good as gas for cost and usually (and increasingly as grid becomes less carbon intensive) less carbon than burning gas directly in a condensing boiler.
I know where your coming from because my heat pump wont cut it in the really cold times without extra heat from my storage heaters. Today quite a bit of excess heat from Solar went into my storage heaters but its end of March, not end of December.
I don't have a WBS but Joeboy now seems to almost get away without gas by using his and he's in a colder place than either of us.
18.7kW PV > 109MWh generated
Ripple 6.6kW Wind + 4.5kW PV > 27MWh generated
6 Other RE Coop's
105kWh EV storage
60kWh Home battery storage
40kWh Thermal storage
GSHP + A2A HP's
Rain water use > 510 m3
Ripple 6.6kW Wind + 4.5kW PV > 27MWh generated
6 Other RE Coop's
105kWh EV storage
60kWh Home battery storage
40kWh Thermal storage
GSHP + A2A HP's
Rain water use > 510 m3
Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
Lakeside Towers does the same. Only im not as rich as Nowty...
8x 170ah Powersafe batteries @ £100 each 2 years old from BT.
4x 180ah AGM batteries I found somewhere years ago.
1x 5kw 48v inverter from ebay £450.
Total cost £1250. Octopus go 7p at night 32p during the day. Success 45kwh per day usage.
Batteries charging and heating 250L tank with immersion. I have 2500w of solar panels to charge batteries directly but havn't installed them in my garden yet.
8x 170ah Powersafe batteries @ £100 each 2 years old from BT.
4x 180ah AGM batteries I found somewhere years ago.
1x 5kw 48v inverter from ebay £450.
Total cost £1250. Octopus go 7p at night 32p during the day. Success 45kwh per day usage.
Batteries charging and heating 250L tank with immersion. I have 2500w of solar panels to charge batteries directly but havn't installed them in my garden yet.
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Re: where next for me with energy storage and extra generation
Intra-day storage is "solved". Batteries and thermal stores to a really great job of taking energy and time-shifting it to somewhere else within a 24hr period. But taking power generated one day and using it several days later is an unsolved problem. It just isn't economical to store energy in that way.Moxi wrote: ↑Thu Mar 31, 2022 9:26 pm I'm going to drop a bit of an idea just before i turn in for the night: happy to be shot down by the morning.
The main issue seems to be needing heat from the heat pump in the winter months, now in order to get that from the heat pump you need expensive batteries which you can charge up with some solar (any wind I don't recall?) or from the nasty expensive grid. you then exchange the stored electricity with a COP of more than 1 to get heat.
Question : is there advantage in a large (very large?) thermal store and a ground mount solar array to store some heat to assist the heat pump to get the required therms you need in winter, but also got the option to harvest some DC if you need electric and not heat.
Now i know direct heating some water or other media is a COP of 1 but the question i am grappling with is how much thermal store and solar panels can you buy for lets say the price of two pylontech batteries and does combining that set up with the HP result in a better COP for the heat pump and a better longer heat delivery period than "burning" the equivalent 4kWh from the two batteries? Also with an integrated thermal store you could use the WBS (assuming its got a boiler) as another heat input source ?
Moxi
The problem with spaceheating and solar in winter is that there simply isn't enough energy from the sun to do anything. My little solar array provides more energy than I can use on the sunniest days. That is a 5-bed house, and includes car charging, running the washer/drier/dishwasher several times, etc.. However in winter there are loads of days when I get little-to-no energy at all from solar. December 2021 I got 5.9kWh for the whole month. Even a solar array 10x the size of mine (big enough to make Nowty blush) wouldn't scratch the surface for spaceheating.
12x 340W JA Solar panels (4.08kWp)
3x 380W JA Solar panels (1.14kWp)
5x 2.4kWh Pylontech batteries (12kWh)
LuxPower inverter/charger
(Artist formally known as ******, well it should be obvious enough to those for whom such things are important.)
3x 380W JA Solar panels (1.14kWp)
5x 2.4kWh Pylontech batteries (12kWh)
LuxPower inverter/charger
(Artist formally known as ******, well it should be obvious enough to those for whom such things are important.)