Alternative solar supply available at point of use Domestic kitchen

Hello newbie : 

Imagine Domestic kitchen Usual array of sockets and under counter appliances

Wish Introduce  Alt solar supply sockets alongside existing grid supply sockets , Thus : User can select alternative ( solar ) supply as opportune arises  at point of use ( battery storage/ inverter system)

Eg plug microwave to alternative socket  as power opportunity ( battery charge is available ) 

(Alt supply sockets are entirely dedicated from inverter as typical OFF grid system ) 

Question  Is there  anything in regs preventing this ; Thought: The sockets must be somehow labelled / identified as alt supply  Any ideas to meet regs? 

Remark : similar to external generator supply but with NO changeover switches . Outlets are dedicated 

thanks Ms Otis 

Parents
  • To throw in my thoughts:

    My grid-tied system has solar and a battery.  The inverter is reasonably clever in what it does with the solar power during the day, prioritised as follows:

    1. Match the load I'm using in the house (highest priority)
    2. Charge the battery
    3. Export anything left over

    An off-grid inverter would lose option 3.  So even if the electricity companies only pay pennies per unit of exported electricity, it's still free money when compared with not exporting it.

    The system seems to be able to generate up to 3.4kW from solar in ideal conditions, or about 2.1kW from the battery (it's a very small battery).  So much of the time, it's powering the entire house, and not only a few selected appliances.

    If there is a power cut, I can operate a big switch to go over to "islanded" (off grid) mode.  That disconnects the whole house from the grid, and re-connects it to a second emergency output from the inverter.

Reply
  • To throw in my thoughts:

    My grid-tied system has solar and a battery.  The inverter is reasonably clever in what it does with the solar power during the day, prioritised as follows:

    1. Match the load I'm using in the house (highest priority)
    2. Charge the battery
    3. Export anything left over

    An off-grid inverter would lose option 3.  So even if the electricity companies only pay pennies per unit of exported electricity, it's still free money when compared with not exporting it.

    The system seems to be able to generate up to 3.4kW from solar in ideal conditions, or about 2.1kW from the battery (it's a very small battery).  So much of the time, it's powering the entire house, and not only a few selected appliances.

    If there is a power cut, I can operate a big switch to go over to "islanded" (off grid) mode.  That disconnects the whole house from the grid, and re-connects it to a second emergency output from the inverter.

Children
  • And Simon's sort of system is much easier to install - no trick wiring of non mains circuits, easier to use (no forgetting to move the freezer to the 'other' supply) and still allows Island operation.

    I have a work colleague with a similar system and also  quite a big battery (upright freezer sort of sized thing) and even on no-sun days he has made a profit by charging the batteries off the mains at cheap rate and selling it back to the grid at peak time.

    Being an electronics sort of chap it is slightly more complex than normal in that the contactors that  switch to island operate automatically, and there are two consumer units, one for 'backed up' stuff that runs island mode when required, and the other for loads that get dropped if external power is lost. It was I think rather pricier than the minimal offering.

    Mike.