Saving Energy using Solar Panels

We have 10 off 550W solar panels installed in our garden with an 8.2kWh battery and inverter in our garage. We are with Octopus as our energy supplier on the Flux tariff for electricity and the fixed tariff for gas.

I have thought about how to use technology to further reduce our use of energy. To start with, I used the Flux tariff to write software using Python that enabled the battery to be charged in the early morning when the price was low and discharge in the evening peek period when the price is high. This has the main benefit of helping to stabilise the grid network. It also helps save energy during the winter period by ensuring the battery is charged up to service the home particularly when there is little sun; this also reduces the cost a bit. I use a Raspberry Pi to run the software. I limit the discharge to ensure that there is sufficient energy to supply the home during the night, this is about 30%.

Then I decided to use the MyEnergi eddi device to control the hot water tank. This boosts the temperature in the tank soon after the battery charge has finished in the morning and maintains the temperature when the solar panels have recharged the battery. This ensures that hot water is available for use during the day. When we started this we found that we had to replace the original 70 year old hot water tank because the immersion heater had broken and replacing that would break the old tank. This helps save energy during the warmer spring, summer and autumn periods by enabling us to turn off the gas boiler, including the pilot light, and only use the gas for some cooking purposes. Gas usage is down to about 50kWh per month (10% of normal) and the overall cost tends to be in credit or close to 0.

Any energy usage from the grid is offset by the export of excess energy from the solar panels. Ensuring the battery is charged up at the beginning of the day maximises the export of excess energy. This is offset a bit by the use of the MyEnergi eddi, which uses about 30% of the battery energy on average. Still this avoids the use of gas to maintain the temperature and is more effective. We don't yet know how well the eddi device will work in winter, maybe we will have to boost the temperature with gas in the afternoon if there is no sun.

Our energy bill for April was £69, May £6 and June £29 in credit - so it appears to be working.

  • As regards seeing a GP - After a certain age (maybe 45) everyone needs to see a GP or equivalent)- it is called preventative medicine- every six months. For men that includes a PSA test.

    See an actual doctor?  Fat chance.

    My old GP retired several years ago, so I was allocated a new one in the practice.  I have never seen him (or her - I don't know as I have never seen them).  I'm not convinced that there are actually any GPs any more in the particular surgery I go to.

    It seems to be staffed by nurses who use instant messaging to chat to a remote GP somewhere.  For all practical purposes, the nurses are prescribing medicines now.  The GP is only there to approve it.

  • Hello Simon:

    The advance medically trained nurses provide a regular nurse with an upward path for advancement from just doing bed pans!

    If a medical problem comes up, one is booked into seeing an actual specialist doctor (example procedure for fixing ingrown toe nails).

    Scripts for medicines are issued without a doctors approval BUT only after getting "buy in" from the patient.. 

    Peter Brooks

    Palm Bay 

  • For all practical purposes, the nurses are prescribing medicines now.

    Very highly (and appropriately) qualified Nurse Practitioners, though?

  • One of the other problems is that being a full-time partner in (NHS) general practice is no longer attractive, so there may be more doctors who work a total of fewer hours.

    My former GP is a similar age to me, and retired about 5 years ago (under age of 50) to move on because of unnecessary issues and pressures in the profession at the current time. There are a multiplicity of issues for those in the profession.

  • Very highly (and appropriately) qualified Nurse Practitioners, though?

    I'm sure they are.

  • Sound like your former GP was "Burned out" due to early COVID.

    Did you hear that all those British "kludge" ventilators were never used and I think had now been trashed. 

    Talking about COVID, the US had decided to have another  round of vaccine shots (against a later strain ) for everyone, late this year.

    Peter  Brooks

    Palm Bay 

  • We also have them trained for Cardiology.

    Peter Brooks

    Palm Bay 

  • Sound like your former GP was "Burned out" due to early COVID.

    She retired about 6-8 months before first reports of COVID abroad (which if memory serves was about 3 months before the pandemic hit the UK)? However, burned out because of the work conditions even at that time ... perhaps?

    Did you hear that all those British "kludge" ventilators were never used and I think had now been trashed. 

    Along with a load of other stuff purchased in the "panic".

    Talking about COVID, the US had decided to have another  round of vaccine shots (against a later strain ) for everyone, late this year.

    That's interesting. Some groups were offered them last year in the UK ... I would have had one, but I booked an appointment and got COVID before the day. The period you need to leave it between having COVID and having the vaccine meant I never got one (or didn't need one) last year !

  • One of the possible options is a combined COVID and Flu shot.

    I learned a long time ago never mix shots.

    Peter Brooks

    Palm Bay   

  • For men that includes a PSA test.

    That is a real can of worms!

    If you get a very high result, you may well have Ca prostate, so probably worthwhile.

    If you get a very low result, happy days!

    The problem is when you get a middling result. The further investigations (e.g. prostate biopsy via you-know-where) may do more harm than good.

    I once worked with a medical statistician who had Ca prostate and he reckoned that serial tests were more useful. If the result goes up in a linear fashion, your prostate is just growing with age, but if it goes up exponentially, you have either developed cancer, or existing control measures are failing.