When you're looking at those numbers, is everything in your house turned off? Remember, all that stuff is still pulling a load. So, everything in your house running at about 7KW + truck pulling 15KW adds up to 22KW.No my solar inverter does not have it's own app. It's all SunRun, but I in effect have 2 systems b/c part of it was leased and part was not. I also have the Ford Charge station pro and the home integration kit to power the house if power goes out.
I certainly can adjust my FCSP, and am thinking about doing that (at the cost of slower charging) but since my net metering generally covers me anyway I don't think that's an issue. . .
I'm really just trying to figure out where the solar power goes when it is not enough to power all the load in the house. . . I thought it would be a net effect as mentioned but the math so far says otherwise, hence my confusion.
(I don't know what EVSE means. . . admitting that does make me feel a bit noob-ish ;-) )
It can feed back and forth within milliseconds, I would have to ask the metering engineers if it can do it simultaneously. You can ask your utility for detailed meter reads and the import/export schedule. Also you can have significant vampire loads in the house that use up your solar energy, not to mention the standard lights, AC, TVs, fridge, freezer, etc.Right right, I get that. . . but maybe that's more the essence of my question. . . can it feed energy in both directions at the same time. . . ?
Of course it will. You increase your house load by about a kilowatt, your draw from the utility will go up by a KW.I also wouldn't expect that me say turning on a microwave would show the meter at an additional pull of 1KW (i.e. 16KW), but it does. . .
You mentioned earlier that the panels were about enough to power the house without the truck.I'm not making it complex. . . I'm simply telling you all what's happening.
It's noon in SoCal. I know that I'm "receiving" 10-13 KW from my 41 solar panels.
I plug in my truck to charge, which according to the Ford app is pulling in 15.6 KW.
My power meter also says I'm pulling in roughly 15.6 KW from the grid. . .
Where does the 10-13 KW from my solar panels go. . . ? To the ground? To heat? Partially back to the grid?
You're trying to tell me that it goes to the main panel and thereby into the truck, but I'm saying if that was true then the meter would not be reading -15KW and the meter could not possibly equal the same value as what the truck is charging at. . .
Yes it's all one meter I should add. . .
Thank you!Right. Clearly the OP needs to gain a better understanding of how their solar system works, which has nothing to do with the truck.
I've wondered about that, too. My panels generate more than 10 KW, but the output gets "clipped" at 10. Also, if we lose power, I assume the panels continue to generate (if it's sunny), but my Generac generator kicks in, because here (Downeast Maine) if the power can't be fed back into the grid, it just goes (I guess) to ground. I am planning to put in a battery backup. That way, I can shift to it when the power goes out, and the panels will keep the battery charged...less waste. I have yet to find an answer to the clipping question, though...will the extra energy (over the 10 KW line) also charge the battery?Right but my question is if the solar is producing less than what I'm drawing (e.g. b/c the truck is charging), but is still producing where is that energy going? Like I said, when charging I can see that i'm drawing ~15K according to the meter and I know that's the rate the truck is charging at. . but if it's noon, i'm also making 9-10KW of power from the solar and I don't know what's happening to it. . .