Basic fixed requirements: 24V 220-240V off grid, pure sine.
Less fixed requirements: Easily support at least 1kW output, without fuss or hassle.
Battery supply: 8S 1P 105Ah LiFePO4 24V pack. Rated for 1-2C max discharge, 0.2C preferred.
I'm wrapping that in grace and taking. 1C 105A and rounding that to 100A at which I will be "breaker'ing"/fusing the battery.
So the invertor has 100A @24V MAX (at this upgrade level). That is 2.4kW - losses.
Load side:My
aspirations on the load side are moderate multi-hour run times of ~100-250W. And experimental short shots of 1kW. ISLAND style. ie. a single 4 plug extension running off the invertor. NEVER mixed with the grid phase.
Earthing/Grounding:The inverter will be terminated on the AC side in a small consumer unit. The house wide PE ground will be attached to all metal casings, including the solar MPPT controller and thus the battery -.
Question!!!: I am led to believe, if you want a proper AC circuit that will for example pass a plug tester, you are required to bond the invertor Neutral to the house PE. This will prevent the NE fault. It will also reference the neutral and earths to the same potential as the grid mains phase neutral. Finally it will allow the ground fault protector to function correctly on the "off grid" extension. Is this correct? Are there any concerns with any potentials building between the neutrals and current flowing between the two?
Future proofing:
The final deciding factor for this system is the space on the garage roof for panels. Due to shading of the sunlight on that roof there really only is room for 3 panels portrait or maybe at a push 2x2 landscape. That ultimately limits this system to around 1000-1500W solar.
I currently have a 40A MPPT (EPEver Tracer4210AN) which supports up to 1000W with a 50% oversizing margin up to 1500W, but limited to 1000W battery charge.
I can add more solar controllers of course. (I have another smaller MPPT, but it's common positive and I don't want to play "that" game with floating 41V DC systems at opposite polarity sitting beside each other.)
The battery can and will obviously continue to expand. 8S 1P will take a few months to build up enough disposable for another 8 cells, but that is the plan. Maybe (finance dependant) go up to the 280Ah cells (£1000+ for
.
That is mind, a 4kW invertor sounds like a good future proof. However. Regardless of how big the battery really gets, I feel it only prudent to keep it's current limit to 100A. Not least because >100A = expensive hardware. So a load greater than 2.4kW will require the step up to 48V and 16S. I don't see that happening with this particularly system. Given the panel power restrictions, keeping it as a 24V, 100A system seems safe and fair.
So... if I want 2.4kW I should aim for a GOOD 3kW inverter or a mediocre 4kW.
My eyes are on one of two invertors.
Branded/warranty/certified:
A Victron Pheonix 1kW 24V: as an interim. £450!
Less well branded:
An EPEver IP Plus 3000W: £400 w/ shipping.
The MPPT is EPEver, which provides that "same eco-system" appeal.
Does this sound like a plan? Any suggestions? Dos, don'ts?