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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 

  • Very few solar inverters transform at 50Hz these days - when one considers the bucket of iron that one needs for 110V site transformer for a kW or so, the reason for not wanting a multi kW 50Hz transformer is pretty obvious. So if there is transformation at all it is a square wave at a supersonic frequency, but as above the most efficient systems chose a battery voltage that allows direct commutation onto the mains.

    Those that want to create a more sinusoidal waveform create slices of DC of varying mark to space ratio, thin slices near the zero crossings and near continuous at the crests. Needless to say unless done very well, this is an EMC minefield.

    The 'transformer-less' inverter is the modern default unless otherwise explicitly stated.

    Mike

  • guess in practicality they are supplied as separate terminals and you connect as you wish.

    Unfortunately, that may not be a safe assumption. At a grossly over-simplified level inverters work by taking the d.c. output from the battery (with some voltage conversion) and connecting it to the 230V a.c. output - alternatively one way around then the other - swapping over many times every second to get the a.c. output.  Exact details will vary with design but often the effect is to reference the d.c. side to one of the poles of the a.c. side - which is usually fine with a fully separated output, but when one output pole is referenced to Earth (as we need it to be when feeding a fixed installation) during one half cycle the d.c. side will be referenced to N (i.e. Earth) which is probably OK, but on the other half cycle it's referenced to the other pole - 230V a.c. (or about 325V peak). So in effect your 48V d.c. battery system has 230V a.c. superimposed on it - no only making a mockery of shock protection measures (you can now get 230Va.c. +/- 48V d.c. between the battery circuit and anything earthed), but stressing all the insulation that was probably only designed for a handful of volts. Not to mention the effect on the charger - which will now have its output referenced to 230V a.c. which it probably didn't expect, with a similar knock-on effect to the PV d.c. wiring and panels.

    Better designs of inverter will including galvanic isolation between the d.c. and a.c. sides - e.g. a double wound transformer at an appropriate point. But such additions add to the cost so aren't universally included. Manufacturer's instructions are you friend here of course - look for something that specifically says if includes a N-PE link internally or states that one may be added externally.

       - Andy.

  • This OFF PISTE  thread  concluding 

    guys  Guess we have exhausted the subject : Before we close this thread:  Huge thanks again to all

    1., Particularly Andy who gave this rather Off piste  project a real consideration. To start us off.  

    2. I take away  from this forum  a solution to the biggest issue I could see Earthing : We seem to agree the proposed earth rod / connect N/E inverter to DNO "Met" earth  ( as in diagram )  is viable and safe ( though testing such seems to have no standard to refer.

    Love to understand more about PME vs my TN-S  problems ?  Anything on this forum specific to that ? 

    3. Will find proper underground cabling system as suggested.  

    Where to now ?  To source the kit  Find local sparks to guide  Must be UPS ofay. Perhaps I will  refer on now to the solar part of this forum 

    other 

    Wish There was some OFF grid solar inverter standard I could insist my kit is supplied to . We only have a conformity standard to UPS  Make sourcing easier .   Much  about ensuring N and E has been underlined : guess in practicality they are supplied as separate terminals and you connect as you wish.

    Will try for some All in one product MPPT controller GRO Watt seems to have a reputation . All advice still welcome 

    Have contacted some suppliers but as observed here much is only offered to their recipe only . If you step outside Your on your  own  

    Go Grid tie ?  Stood  my ground to see where we might go. You did make me doubt .   Still with my " dial up your washing m/c" as and when  approach  I could actually see the real benefit. Viable/ simple  grid/ off grid combination . Reduce  reliance to grid : Even now another storm threatens to flood .Grid tie claims Hard to decipher small print amongst claims .  I hate software. 

    Basics :Joule = 1Watt-second  In visual N/metres as the washing machine spins. 

    All my thanks again   Ms O 

  • Expecting the solar panel dc will be in order of 100V or so :  48V battery. :   Dont think unusual ?

    That sounds like a quite modest system then (my 2.14kWp PV array often chucks out over 400V on the d.c. side). If you can keep in the ELV range (50V a.c. or 120V ripple free d.c.) that certainly keep things simpler from a shock protection point of view. 48V means quite high currents though.

    I guess you'd need a 3kW inverter as a minimum (maybe higher to cope with more than one appliance or larger starting currents) - that would mean 62.5A (assuming 100% efficiency, again optimistic). if that's going through your buried 10mm² (presuming you actually have the CCC for that installation method - which looks marginal at first sight) 10mm² has a voltage drop of around 4.4mV/A/m - so  62.5A over 30m means about 8.25V voltage drop - so probably makes sense to have the inverter along side the battery in the garage, and send 230V a.c. back to the house.

    If the PV output to the battery is going through the underground cable you probably need to do a similar calculation (we don't have the numbers to do that yet). I guess it too will suggest the charger will have to be next to the battery - but the losses in the PV cables might still be significant.

    OK Know you recommended something before  Can you point me to a supplier for your recommendation .

    Suppliers are much of a muchness - so I'd suggest shopping around for a good deal (local availability and/or national delivery prices can often make more difference than the headline price) - so just as a random example - TLC Twinwall ducting (the usual convention is black for buried LV electric cables, other colours indicate other types of services - blue for water, yellow for gas, brown/teracotta for drains etc etc). You also need covers or tape to identify it - e.g. https://www.tlc-direct.co.uk/Products/FMPT103.html buried above it.

       - Andy.

  • didnt know thanks advice  I'll  take it on board Add to my list of all the things I have learnt from here 

    thanks Ms O 

  • Personally, and I have no idea/couldn't care less if it it is proscibed by "the regulations", I am absolutely against the use of blue mpde water pipe, brown soil pipe and white/grey waste pipe as cable ducting.

    Agreed ... they are not appropriate cable ducting or conduit according to the relevant standards ...

  • Personally, and I have no idea/couldn't care less if it it is proscibed by "the regulations", I am absolutely against the use of blue mpde water pipe, brown soil pipe and white/grey waste pipe as cable ducting. And I've come across them all. It is asking for trouble imho. As specific, easily identifiable, cable ducting is readily available why would you use anything else?

  • no 90 bends only  120 : Pull throughs going in  Doing it bit by bit letting my lawn grow back  Do you have any advice on what kind of cable for underground  Moisture proof ?   Supplier Ms O 

  • Plastic weld drain  pipe already partially run : 3 lots separated  50mm 30mm and aluminium under floor heating tube for  data cable

    Good luck! 

    Any bends?

  • worries about impact/shock protection for any LV d.c. on an unearthed system ..

    Oh please expand  Expecting the solar panel dc will be in order of 100V or so :  48V battery. :   Dont think unusual ? So what normal  protections would be usual please ? 

    Reckon I would run earth to solar mount "belt and braces".  Reckon bury a 3 core 10mm cable for ac side with the earth core as  link  inverter N/E to  DNO TNS MET ?  

    FYI 

    Plastic weld drain  pipe already partially run : 3 lots separated  50mm 30mm and aluminium under floor heating tube for  data cable  

    I am going to need local expertise. If any suggestions 

    Ms O 

    PS reckon the energy future outook  is precarious at best . Reckon some off grid  mix could be wise . And simple maintenance.