cvalue13
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- Austin, Texas
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- ā22 Lightning ER Lariat
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Aluminum from panel to disconnectWhat wire did you use?
Aluminum from panel to disconnect
Disconnect to charger copper.
saved me more than 500 because of long run, 2 conductors
Other than carbon reduction (which was a large part of why I installed it), why would anyone even install PV if you have to pay for your generation?awesome and helpful reply
on the text quoted above, could you hand-hold me one step further in what exact functionality weāre describing there?
perhaps at issue here is not only my lack of ability in the topic in general, but also some quirks about Austinās electrical grid oddities. Namely, they have a meter both in front and behind the PV, so charge for solar PV even if the grid is down - which is why I have no home battery/inverter installed with my PV currently (because from a cost perspective itās useless, except to the extent of providing a battery in a blackout that I still get charged for)
So I have 21KW of PV, I have a lightning, but am still not certain of what the HIS $ will buy me in terms of capabilities - seemingly this āgrid-tieā mode you mention being something I should understand better
Well said, and thanks for clarifying. To explore a bit further: Assuming the 4kW of the default BDI is the max AC output from PV, is it clear that does not happen when the grid is down?When OFF GRID (meaning power failure), all Delta BDI's can deliver 10 kW to your isolated home's electrical system from the truck's battery.
When ON GRID and operating in "grid-tie" mode with solar PV installs, the Delta BDI's have a range of 4 kW through 10 kW. The default model provided by Sunrun is only able to feed in 4 kW. If you have a larger solar PV install and want to use it to offset your grid usage, you'll need a larger inverter. The rest of the components should remain the same.
From a wiring standpoint, there is very little difference as you'll need to have the 10 kW rated backfeed for off-grid mode to work.
If you plan to use the FCSP at full capacity, a 100A circuit is required, so #1 aluminum / #3 copper.Thanks, 1awg aluminum and 3awg copper? My electrician was planning 2awg aluminum to the transition box but I'm thinking that's a little... aggressive.
You don't have batteries on your system, so you are using what they call a "grid tie" system. If your solar PV system is producing more than your instantaneous demand, the power flows out to the grid and furnishes power to your neighbor's homes. Once production ends (clouds, night, etc.), then you draw from the grid.on the text quoted above, could you hand-hold me one step further in what exact functionality weāre describing there?
perhaps at issue here is not only my lack of ability in the topic in general, but also some quirks about Austinās electrical grid oddities. Namely, they have a meter both in front and behind the PV, so charge for solar PV even if the grid is down - which is why I have no home battery/inverter installed with my PV currently (because from a cost perspective itās useless, except to the extent of providing a battery in a blackout that I still get charged for)
So I have 21KW of PV, I have a lightning, but am still not certain of what the HIS $ will buy me in terms of capabilities - seemingly this āgrid-tieā mode you mention being something I should understand better
To me, it is not (at least not yet). In the post above, I describe the difficulty in dealing with solar PV in a single-home microgrid situation. There's little buffer for absorbing production changes from solar (shaded panels, etc.) or demand changes in the home.Well said, and thanks for clarifying. To explore a bit further: Assuming the 4kW of the default BDI is the max AC output from PV, is it clear that does not happen when the grid is down?
to be a bit clearer, thereās a meter āin frontā and ābehindā of the solar such that a person is āchargedā for (- electricity use) - (+ PV generation) at a given rate for each. So, Iām a given month (on average), I pay the electric company almost nothing because I generate (at a good flat rate) nearly as much I use (on tiered rates). and Austin has no rate differential between hours, so no sort of peak-shaving is possible.Other than carbon reduction (which was a large part of why I installed it), why would anyone even install PV if you have to pay for your generation?
You can get some "peak shaving" based upon your daily load, though, if there's a difference in credit rate for what you feed the grid vs. retail rate for what you draw from the grid.to be a bit clearer, thereās a meter āin frontā and ābehindā of the solar such that a person is āchargedā for (- electricity use) - (+ PV generation) at a given rate for each. So, Iām a given month (on average), I pay the electric company almost nothing because I generate (at a good flat rate) nearly as much I use (on tiered rates). and Austin has no rate differential between hours, so no sort of peak-shaving is possible.
If it's just basic net metering (what you consume from grid minus what you push out to grid), then you're right, no sense in maintaining a battery. But most power companies want to dump net metering because it doesn't reflect the reality of the demand curve they face. In Illinois, only investor-owned utilities are required to do net metering. Municipal and co-op companies can use different rates for what you consume vs. what you provide to the grid. A local town uses a straight 50% of retail for what you feed to the grid, my co-op uses its wholesale power cost for the amount you feed to the grid.Put a little differently / more simply: Austin Energy treats residential PV as an extension of their own grid. I just happen to have it located in my roof.
You can get some "peak shaving" based upon your daily load, though, if there's a difference in credit rate for what you feed the grid vs. retail rate for what you draw from the grid.
Yes, itās just basic net metering. Ironic for Austin, and itās āforward thinkingā energy self-image.If it's just basic net metering, then you're right, no sense in maintaining a battery. But most power companies want to dump net metering because it doesn't reflect the reality of the demand curve they face.
So instead of using this massive battery as a buffer for demand, while mostly feeding PV to load (as most battery/PV systems do), they just cut the AC output from PV. Sad if true.To me, it is not (at least not yet). In the post above, I describe the difficulty in dealing with solar PV in a single-home microgrid situation. There's little buffer for absorbing production changes from solar (shaded panels, etc.) or demand changes in the home.
I'm wondering if they're purposely keeping the solar PV feed-in low for this reason, to eliminate the challenges posed by big swings of demand and supply in a microgrid situation. That might allow them to keep the attached solar PV panels in microgrid sync and save some battery power from the truck, while not having to worry about big demand swings creating a shutdown situation.
And then, given that it appears to be able to charge the truck's batteries using DC, if your total demand is even less than what you're producing via solar PV, it can redirect it to charge the truck's battery until it's full.
I can see it working either way but don't have definitive answers.