[RE-wrenches] AC Coupled with Generator

Ray Walters ray at solarray.com
Fri Aug 21 17:53:48 PDT 2015


Just reading up on Magnum's new AC load diversion controller.  It looks 
like the best option at this point, it provides AC load diversion so you 
can use AC loads not DC resistors, and it communicates with the 
inverter, so the system has both 3 stage temp compensated battery 
charging, and has 2 fail safes, because Magnum inverters can do the 
frequency shift method to turn off the GT inverters as well.
Anyone try this, or have any feed back/ comments?

R.Ray Walters
CTO, Solarray, Inc
Nabcep Certified PV Installer,
Licensed Master Electrician
Solar Design Engineer
303 505-8760

On 8/21/2015 7:45 AM, Starlight Solar Power Systems wrote:
> Ray,
>
> I’m curious about what you mean by not doing a 3 stage charge. While 
> PV charging in coupled mode (off grid), the battery will reach your 
> absorption set point. Is this triggering the GT inverters to shut off 
> or does the battery inverter absorb timer run at all? I would think 
> the absorb timer should run until the array current produced is more 
> than being consumed and then the the GT shuts off.
>
> Just a wild idea here but if you could calculate the AH needed to 
> reach 100% SoC after the GT inverters shut down, a separate PV array 
> and charge controller would stay online to finish the charge. No 
> wasted energy to dump loads and the customer has more usable power 
> from the system. This may cost more than going to a dump load though.
>
> Larry
>
> On Aug 20, 2015, at 10:56 PM, Ray Walters <ray at solarray.com 
> <mailto:ray at solarray.com>> wrote:
>
> Hi Folks;
>
> I've done more research on the whole AC coupled issue, and one flaw I 
> found with both the Sunny Island and the Radian is that they can't 
> really do a full 3 stage charge for the batteries in off grid mode.
> They detect that the batteries are full and disconnect the AC coupled 
> GT inverters, but this is about as subtle as the very early charge 
> controllers, and amounts to 1 stage charging.  This is fine for 
> temporary outages, and when the grid comes back, the batteries get a 
> good 3 stage charge.  But these folks are really wanting a design that 
> could be taken off grid permanently.   Also as you my recall, the GT 
> PV system is Enphase, so we can't use the more sophisticated controls 
> that SMA offers for the Sunny boys.
> I hate to say it, but I might be back to a diversion load with PWM 
> controller.  Not elegant, but we could get 3 stage charging.
> Every time I look at AC coupled setups, I just want to start over with 
> charge controllers.
> R.Ray Walters
> CTO, Solarray, Inc
> Nabcep Certified PV Installer,
> Licensed Master Electrician
> Solar Design Engineer
> 303 505-8760
> On 8/17/2015 9:39 PM, Mac Lewis wrote:
>> Hi Ray,
>>
>> With that size grid-tied system, you would want to use a battery 
>> based inverter(s) near the (6.7/0.8) 8000W range.
>>
>> The frequency shift of the Sunny Islands will work with kicking out 
>> the enphase inverters but you wouldn't get the same output ramping 
>> that it would offer if it was a Sunny Boy grid-tied inverter.  The 
>> Sunny Island can effectively solve your generator backfeeding because 
>> there is a reverse current sensor that will disconnect the AC input 
>> at whatever level you want, 50 mA is default I think.  You may need 
>> to give the Sunny Island generator start control for this however.
>>
>> You can read about it here on page 137.
>>
>> http://files.sma.de/dl/15216/SI4548-6048-US-BE-en-21W.pdf
>>
>> You'll need to give the Sunny Island a digital signal that tell it 
>> whether its connected to a generator or a grid as outlined in the 
>> manual.
>>
>>  This is where the Radian is nice because it has two AC Input terminals.
>>
>> Sounds like an interesting project.
>>
>> Good Luck.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Aug 17, 2015 at 8:36 PM, Jerry Shafer 
>> <jerrysgarage01 at gmail.com <mailto:jerrysgarage01 at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>>     I cant see this working well without some battery based inverter
>>     Jerry
>>
>>     On Aug 17, 2015 10:10 AM, "Ray Walters" <ray at solarray.com
>>     <mailto:ray at solarray.com>> wrote:
>>
>>         HI Esteemed Wrenches:
>>
>>         I am consulting on a system I have never seen, that consists
>>         of a 6.7Kw Enphase roof mounted system, and 2 backup
>>         generators.  Each generator has an automatic 200 amp transfer
>>         switch to back up its own 200 amp panel.  Both 200 amp panels
>>         are fed by a 400 amp service from the grid.
>>         The Enphase PV backfeeds a subpanel in another building which
>>         then is fed by a 2 pole 60 amp breaker in one of the 200 amp
>>         panels.
>>         Currently they are having issues with the generators kicking
>>         out because of the Enphase inverters.  That part I
>>         understand: you can't backfeed a generator, or its voltage
>>         regulation freaks out.
>>
>>         Now we get to the fun part: they want to create a third
>>         critical load subpanel with loads selected from both 200 amp
>>         panels to be powered by batteries and an inverter.
>>         I am considering the Sunny Island since it makes the most
>>         sense with its ability to signal the Enphase inverters to
>>         shut off when the batteries are full.  I also see this as a
>>         partial solution to the generator issue, since normally the
>>         Enphase will be connected to the output side of the Sunny
>>         Island.  However, when the generator is used to charge, we
>>         will be back to directly coupling the generator output to the
>>         Enphase.
>>
>>         Here are some possible solutions I'm considering:
>>         1) Use a separate charger for the generator so that it will
>>         only feed DC to the batteries, and not be AC coupled.
>>         2) convert the PV back to DC with charge controllers, but
>>         that would involve ditching and adding another conduit run
>>         between buildings.
>>         3)  Put the Enphase PV on a relay that would disconnect the
>>         PV when charging with the generator.
>>         4) Something I haven't thought of that one of you clever
>>         folks can suggest......
>>
>>         As always, thanks in advance for all you responses,
>>
>>         -- 
>>         R.Ray Walters
>>         CTO, Solarray, Inc
>>         Nabcep Certified PV Installer,
>>         Licensed Master Electrician
>>         Solar Design Engineer
>>         303 505-8760 <tel:303%20505-8760>
>>
>
>
>
>
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