QLeo
Established Member
- Joined
- May 17, 2023
- Messages
- 276
- Reaction score
- 410
- Points
- 130
- Location
- Scottish Highlands
- Driving
- MG4 SE LR
Yeah, we don't have a diesel generator, just a little petrol one, but until Goth Leo came on the scene, we'd need it perhaps a couple of times a week in winter. Goth Leo does make things easier as we can risk discharging the house battery deeper, then spend plenty of time on Leo's power to get them back up to a decent SOC rather than run a noisy generator.Here, the issue is winter. Ask @QLeo about that. You can store enough solar in summer to keep you going, powering the night from yesterday's solar, and over the week you're fine. But in winter when day after day there's nowhere near enough, how do you store excess summer solar and use it then? How many MG4 batteries would you need?
QLeo has a wind turbine and a diesel generator, though I believe he's driving Goth Leo to the nearest charger and bringing back grid-derived electricity that way to run the house from VtL, rather than burn diesel. Storing excess summer solar for winter isn't yet practical.
However, I have no idea what it's like in winter in Australia. Is there still enough to run the house load, spread out over a week or so? You won't get enough to charge a car though, surely.
As you say, long term battery storage at domestic levels is not really possible.
But Aus is much better off than we are for solar, possibly through the year. Even southern Tasmania is 18 degrees closer to the equator than we are, and we get most of our household power from solar for 8.5 months of the year.
But off-grid and feed-in systems are very different things, and priorities are very different. A case in point; someone in the electrical industry visited the other day and asked if we have panels on adjustable mounts. No, because I doubt they'd survive our winter gales. He then asked why the panels were at such a steep angle. It's because we're not seeking to maximise summer input, as one might if wishing to maximise feed-in tariffs. Instead, we want to squeeze more out of those shoulder seasons, so, if they're "optimised" at all, it's for those short times of the year.
Incidentally, and for a change, the person I was chatting with understood immediately why the house battery is a set of huge forklift 2v lead-acid cells - they can take the unpredictable charge regimes of an off-grid environment much better than lithium. But that may also be less of an issue in Aus, where sunlight may well be more certain than the far north west of Scotland.
Oops - got carried away - hope you didn't read this far...
