Yeah, it was funny viewing the german from balkonkraftwerk fuming from rage in his video.
Though, the regulations are more complicated. For compliance the inverter doesn't need to have a relay. The installation must have. For the grid code.
This is in basically all of Europe. Here they mandate a "scheider" or separator. Transistors are not a separator. Thus big inverters use a contactor for that. Space enough.
Now I'm not sure if the regulation specific for inverters specifies any different, but that isn't a VDE, it would be an IEC.Microinverters cannot use any mechanical relays due to their IP rating and wide temperature range. It's not going to happen, there are no off the shelf relays for this use case.
The worst part of this is Deye intentionally putting such relay inside the inverter, completing VDE 4105 certification, then removing the relay.
They could just as well have validated the inverter without the relay with a stipulation that external automatic separator would be required.
But they would have lost their edge to their competitor...
Enphase for example sells the q-relay in europe which provides isolation in abnormal grid states.
The q-relay also provides DC leakage current protection mandatory for PV systems. Even though Enphase uses isolation transformers, turning the changes of Dc fault to negligible..
Most big inverter include DC leakage protection inside. (if they don't do this right you get the
Easee situation)
I'm not sure if Deye has DC-leakage protection. If they don't users may need to install a pricey type B rcd.
This isn't VDE 4105 I think, but at least in our installation code NEN 1010 derived from IEC 60364.
Bottom line, they shouldn't have done this to Germans. It probably wouldn't have been a big issue in any other country.
But Germans... they love their VDE.