Hi all,
I have a house with a setup that seems pretty good for an AC coupled battery setup, but wanted to solicit advice as I haven't found any local contractors who are knowledgeable and it looks like I might end up DIYing.
I currently have 17kw of solar, across two systems. One is a 12kw solaredge system and the other is a 5kw SMA system. I also have a Generac standby generator; it's a little one- 7kw, but powers all of my important systems (well, septic, sump pump, hot water, some heating, lighting, telecom equipment, etc). We don't have outages terribly often, but when we get them, they can run for up to one week. Call it once or twice a year.
My generator is about 15 years old and is getting to the point where I'm considering replacing it. I can replace it for $2k, so of course this is probably the cheapest/easiest path. However, since I already have my important loads on their own subpanel (the Generac transfer panel), I figured maybe I could patch together a battery system that would allow me to access my grid-tie solar system during outages and get rid of the noisy generator. I don't mind dragging over a small 2kw inverter generator during an extended outage to top off batteries, so I'm less concerned about the number of batteries- I'm more concerned about enabling my solar during the day during outages and getting rid of the routine maintenance and that god awful weekly exercise noise on the standby generator.
I would definitely need at least 8kw of output from the inverter. I don't have high usage needs, but I have a couple loads that are very short but very powerful- the pumps, for example, run for maybe a minute or two every hour, but if they were all running at the same time they could draw up to about 6kw (one is on 240v).
Thinking out loud here, but would it be as simple as 1. dismantling/removing the old generator, 2. getting an Outback Radian 8kw inverter/charger and effectively connecting the output to my existing generator output (so the transfer switch would see the inverter as the backup power source), and 3. moving the output from my 12kw solar system onto the transfer switch panel? I'm trying to be lazy here by reusing the existing transfer panel but I accept that I might need a new panel for the backed up loads. After that, I would just add the minimum number of batteries necessary to support an 8kw draw for a short period of time- again, not focused on kwh, but just kw, since the solar would support the overall usage. My usage at night is very low too. I'm thinking maybe ~5-8kwh of batteries.
I'd also add an input receptacle for the generator input on the Outback system so that I could run a 2kw inverter generator to charge batteries on cloudy days or at night if needed (i.e. if it were a rainy day and I knew I'd be running pumps all night).
All in, I'm thinking I could get it done in the $5k-$8k territory before credits. Anyway, please- correct me where I'm wrong because I'm still in the investigation stage! Thanks!
I have a house with a setup that seems pretty good for an AC coupled battery setup, but wanted to solicit advice as I haven't found any local contractors who are knowledgeable and it looks like I might end up DIYing.
I currently have 17kw of solar, across two systems. One is a 12kw solaredge system and the other is a 5kw SMA system. I also have a Generac standby generator; it's a little one- 7kw, but powers all of my important systems (well, septic, sump pump, hot water, some heating, lighting, telecom equipment, etc). We don't have outages terribly often, but when we get them, they can run for up to one week. Call it once or twice a year.
My generator is about 15 years old and is getting to the point where I'm considering replacing it. I can replace it for $2k, so of course this is probably the cheapest/easiest path. However, since I already have my important loads on their own subpanel (the Generac transfer panel), I figured maybe I could patch together a battery system that would allow me to access my grid-tie solar system during outages and get rid of the noisy generator. I don't mind dragging over a small 2kw inverter generator during an extended outage to top off batteries, so I'm less concerned about the number of batteries- I'm more concerned about enabling my solar during the day during outages and getting rid of the routine maintenance and that god awful weekly exercise noise on the standby generator.
I would definitely need at least 8kw of output from the inverter. I don't have high usage needs, but I have a couple loads that are very short but very powerful- the pumps, for example, run for maybe a minute or two every hour, but if they were all running at the same time they could draw up to about 6kw (one is on 240v).
Thinking out loud here, but would it be as simple as 1. dismantling/removing the old generator, 2. getting an Outback Radian 8kw inverter/charger and effectively connecting the output to my existing generator output (so the transfer switch would see the inverter as the backup power source), and 3. moving the output from my 12kw solar system onto the transfer switch panel? I'm trying to be lazy here by reusing the existing transfer panel but I accept that I might need a new panel for the backed up loads. After that, I would just add the minimum number of batteries necessary to support an 8kw draw for a short period of time- again, not focused on kwh, but just kw, since the solar would support the overall usage. My usage at night is very low too. I'm thinking maybe ~5-8kwh of batteries.
I'd also add an input receptacle for the generator input on the Outback system so that I could run a 2kw inverter generator to charge batteries on cloudy days or at night if needed (i.e. if it were a rainy day and I knew I'd be running pumps all night).
All in, I'm thinking I could get it done in the $5k-$8k territory before credits. Anyway, please- correct me where I'm wrong because I'm still in the investigation stage! Thanks!
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