Fair point, there are so many different system combinations out there. Just being generic, irrespective of how many panels and inverters or solar controllers are in a systems design eventually that power potentially flipped multiples times through AC & DC will eventually end up as a 48V DC stored energy bank (could be 12V or 24V as well, system design depending). I then T in an inverter to the positive and negative side of the battery bank et voila 230V AC on a socket offgird. I hope that makes sense?stevevoller wrote: ↑Thu Jan 11, 2024 9:54 pm I have been thinking about that suggestion, more as an emergency backup, but with that DC-AC portable inverter , that looks like it only goes to 48V , wont the DC input from the PV string be much higher than that? or do you just have a few panels connected?
Joeboy wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 9:22 pmSteve,stevevoller wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 8:57 pm So am I basically screwed with what I have? (Growatt min 6000 with PV + Luxpower ACS 3600 with batteries)
In an extended power-cut I can run the UPS load until the battery expires and then everything is off.
Is there a solution that will let me keep the batteries, PV and preferably the inverters, or do I need a different solution to work in an extended power cut?
My solution to grid loss and keeping access to the DC power in the batteries is a DC to AC inverter with 3 pin plug built in, T'd off of the battery stack. Its not particularly fancy or expensive and it is simple although i am restricted to an extension reel to where i need the power. I also have the benefit of half the PV running through a charge controller directly to the batteries rather than through a grid tied inverter. The result is an offgrid reliable 2kW supply that can spike to 3kW for short moments fed from 5kWp.
Something like this.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/FENGSSLL-Effic ... 02&sr=8-18
Basic though this solution is I can cook, heat my HWT, run PC, TV, lights etc if the grid fails. Although not all at once! I have run the washing machine on the inverter as a test, no problem. I could also charge the EV through the granny charger. My point being that for not too much outlay a reasonable facsimile of normal life can take place in extended power outages. Preferably in the March to Sept window.
One of the best ideas I find, is to do a line diagram. Just get a sheet of A4 and a pencil. Get your head round what you've got and then extend it into what you want to have. It's a brilliant shortcut.