Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: ArtiglioNot looked at the link beyond seeing its 200 pages long, but given that less than 10 years ago the gov was actively encouraging people to install biomass in homes off the gas grid via the rhi scheme, is there going to be a similar scheme for those now effectively abandoned as the reisdential biomass “industry†effectively disappears, it pretty much already has. Biomass systems being pulled out and replaced at considerable cost with the oil/ gas they originally replaced. An utter disaster in policy terms.
Posted By: gustyturbineI'd like 10kW of PV ground mounted but I have no export capacity above 3.68kW.
Posted By: gustyturbineI think though as I'm building again I'd go solar PV with ASHP.That can work in terms of net zero averaged over a year but it's not well matched to the actual demand. And a battery doesn't really help with that. An offsite wind turbine seems like the best option to me at present, given the potential hassles of having one onsite. Maybe if/when there is commercial tidal generation it will be possible to buy a stake in that?
Posted By: gustyturbineI'd like 10kW of PV ground mounted but I have no export capacity above 3.68kW.
Posted By: GreenPaddy- in December, I usually get about 25kWh over the month from a 4kWp PV system (worst month)Interesting figures, and significantly different from mine. I don't keep monthly averages, although I could work them out if necessary, but just looking at Dec 21 et seq, I see
- ave for Jan/Feb is about 50kWh per month
- my consumption av about 350kWh per month for each of Dec/Jan Feb
HOWEVER, with batteries, the opportunity for cheap import and storage makes heat pumps excellent heat energy solutions for homes during the heating season, IF you have a heat energy demand large enough to make the capital investment, and annual maintenance charges for HP's worth while.I think there's one assessment for heat pumps and then a separate one for batteries. We use direct electric heating so I keep reconsidering whether a heat pump is worthwhile either economically or on the carbon front. But we normally do all our heating overnight so there's no advantage to storing electricity. We can just store the heat.
Posted By: djhI too have a 4 kWp system, limited to 3.68 kWp.
Posted By: revorDo you mean that most you can produce is 3.68 or can you generate 4kw and the 3.68 is the export cap?The former; although it would be nice to have the latter I have no technology able to measure the export accurately, let alone control it.
Posted By: djhThe former; although it would be nice to have the latter I have no technology able to measure the export accurately, let alone control it.
Posted By: revorCorrect, yes. Was there a point?Posted By: djhThe former; although it would be nice to have the latter I have no technology able to measure the export accurately, let alone control it.
Do you get FIT what you generate must be measured to get payment for 50%
Posted By: djhCorrect, yes. Was there a point?
Posted By: revorThe point being it must be measured accurately i,e what you generate, so you get the 50% FIT. So how is that metered. Why do you need the export measured accurately.As you state, I must have an accurate generation meter in order to be paid for FIT with deemed export. Equally I clearly do not have either an accurate export meter or a smart meter since I have already stated that I have no means to accurately measure export. I would need an accurate measure of the export if I was to have a system that was capable of dynamically limiting the export to 3.68 kW rather than having a static generation limit as I do. I thought that was obvious.
I do not understand why you are not generating the full capability of the panels is it to do with the micro inverters. Is there a clamp somewhere on your tails that controls the export limit. A conventional string inverter will not limit the total output just restrict what goes to the grid.Yes I have microinverters and yes somehow they limit the generation. There is no way either they or a conventional string inverter could limit export since they have no means to measure it. I do have various CT clamps on the system as part of my OEM logging system, but they are not revenue grade and are not connected to the generation system or associated with it in any way.
Posted By: revorIs the issue common to all systems with microinverters or could you upgrade to a more favourable install that solves the export measurement and control?I have no idea about other microinverter systems or indeed other 'regular' inverter systems. I don't believe that Enphase offer a suitable 'upgrade' to my system. But I don't have a problem with my system that inclines me to seek a change anyway.
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