Rolfe
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- Location
- West Linton, Scotland
- Driving
- MG4 SE SR
What is now puzzling me is why the inverter is happy to shove power from the battery to the Zappi ad infinitum if the solar has faded, but in the exact same situation it cuts the power to the Eddi, first so that it's only using what surplus is actually available, and then completely to let the battery recharge.
Leaving the Zappi as priority on a day like today is risky, because the clouds are liable to keep coming over and the battery gets lower and lower. On the other hand, leaving the Eddi as priority means solar is being used to heat and re-heat the water tank which isn't really needed at the moment.
Anyway, Duward should be here in ten minutes.
Well, while I still don't entirely understand the how or the why of what is going on, Duward and I arrived at what might be an interim solution and might be a final one, depending on how it goes. It's going fine so far. But if it doesn't work, then the option of changing the wiring is still there.
Duward seems to have got up to speed on the wiring issue, but says he isn't entirely convinced that John's suggested remedy is the best one. Although the question of pre-heating wasn't something he'd thought of (he doesn't have an EV himself), he did point out what I had also noticed, which is that there is a definite advantage to letting the car have access to some of the battery. By smoothing over the peaks and troughs of solar generation, the battery allows more of the generation to go into the car and prevents repeated switching off and on as the weather changes.
So his suggestion was when the car is plugged in and expected to charge from the solar, to change the battery setting in the morning so that the battery isn't allowed to discharge more than a pre-set percent. I'm still trying to figure out what the best percent is to set it at, but the answer I think is somewhere between 90% and 94% (which leaves 91% or 95% in the battery).
This should absolutely prevent the issue John has warned about, what he called "resonance", with the feed to the Zappi ramping up so that the battery is drained very quickly. Once the battery gets to the pre-set limit, the feed will be cut. It will also prevent the issue of the battery continuing to be drained by a relatively low-level charge at the end of the day or if the weather turns very dull for a prolonged period.
It's not too hard to remember to change the protected battery % at the start of the day. What is slightly more difficult to remember is to change it back in the evening. Maybe I'll set an alarm on my phone for the time I expect to have to do that.
Most of the time there is a reasonable window to get this done. The Zappi cuts out while there is still some solar, which then starts to re-charge the battery. Just remember to allow the house access to the battery before switching on the oven or before it gets to the point where the battery has to take over running the house.
Yesterday this worked well. The sunny intervals were quite interval-ish and charging cut out several times while waiting for surplus, and the battery stayed above the 90% set limit. Then in the evening charging cut out while the solar was gradually decreasing. After that happened the remaining generation went both to the Eddi and to recharge the battery, so that by the time the sun went completely the water was hot and the battery back at 100%. Just, y'know, remember to give the house access to the battery before you switch on the oven... (I spotted it immediately, but I need to bear that in mind.) I only got 9.2 kWh into the car but I think it would have been less if it hadn't been for the battery tiding the charge over the shorter breaks in the sunshine.
Today I'd say it worked well too, though slightly differently. Here's the graph.
Again I set the battery limit to 90% some time in the morning. This time the sunny intervals were frequent enough that the car never stopped charging from when it started at 9 am until it was cut out by the battery falling below its limit at 6pm. I got 19 kWh into the car despite the intermittent sun. Three times during the day it was very close to cutting out, but the solar generation picked up just in time. (Around 4 pm the battery bridged a 15-minute rainstorm when it was extremely dull.) Then when it did pick up, the generation was split between the Zappi and the battery so that the battery had some reserves again the next time the solar dipped.
The difference this time was that just as the battery was approaching its cut-off in the evening the skies darkened and it began to rain heavily. That meant that there was practically no generation left to recharge the battery or indeed to run the Eddi after the Zappi had given up. (Indeed the Eddi didn't get much of a look-in in the morning either, as the solar generation shot up just about the time when surplus was due to appear so that the Zappi more or less grabbed the lot.)
So maybe a slightly higher cut-off would be appropriate so that it doesn't all fall off a cliff quite so suddenly in the evening. On the other hand it is very dependent on the weather. I'll have to try it a few more times. The car still isn't full, and I'm out (in the car) in the afternoon, so I'll see what happens tomorrow evening if I set the cut-off at maybe 94%.
It would be nice if it was possible to schedule these changes in battery reserve capacity, but it's no chore to remember to increase the reserve in the morning, and if the car is still charging by evening an alarm on the phone (or a post-it on the oven door) should do it. It does mean that the system can be ignored all day, as it's impossible for it to do anything disastrous. It's not possible (in summer) that the solar generation won't be enough to power the house during daylight hours.
Today there is the issue that the water heating didn't happen, and maybe it would have if I'd set the reserve battery a bit higher and the charging had been cut a couple of times. But if the water isn't hot enough I have other options - either simply use some battery to heat the water through an Eddi boost, or, if it's chilly enough in the evening so I have to turn on the central heating for a couple of hours, let the boiler heat the water at the same time.
So far so good. As far as I am concerned the daytime charging issues are a solved problem.
I don't know about the overnight charging issue yet, because the solar has actually managed to keep pace with my driving - which I didn't actually expect. The solution there is to set the house battery to recharge from the grid while the car is charging, so that the battery doesn't discharge to support the Zappi's demands. I can only assume that's what everyone else with these systems is doing (although Duward hasn't explicitly confirmed it), so I imagine it will work.
If I get that bloody G99 next week then it will all become a lot less complicated, but I'm glad I've learned all this.
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