speculatrix
DIY
We had a PV/battery system was fitted in late May, and measurements showed it was working very well, but then a few weeks ago the old meter (electronic box about the size of a large cigarette packet) was replaced with a SMET2 meter and everything went down hill!
When the PV system was working, when the sun rose, the grid draw dropped as the PV took the load, a little later the the battery would charge, and after the battery was full, excess power was exported. If there was a high level of demand, even during the day, battery power would be drawn rather than pull from the grid.
I have a Sofar Hybrid Inverter and a Pylontech 7.2kWh pack, and a Growatt power conditioner (which reduces the 245 to 247V of my local grid down to 225 to 227 ish). It's the Growatt which is the source of my headaches. As far as I can tell, the Growatt is really just a toroidal auto-transformer, with additional RCDs and circuit breakers for protection, and some protective windings in the transformer to detect shielding faults and safely trip things.
Here's my attempt at annotating it:
Everybody was happy. Well, apart from the fact I didn't get paid for exporting energy, because I had no smart meter. Finally, I got a date.
The Landis+Gyre smart meter was fitted on the 19th August.
The day after the smart meter was fitted, I observed that the solar shut down after the battery was charged, there was no export at all, nor was the house being powered by the PV/Battery system. When I looked closely, I found that the RCBO, which is between the PV/Battery system and the grid connection, had failed completely and couldn't be re-engaged. There was no exterior sign of damage - no scorching etc. I contacted the PV/battery installer, and a tech person at Growatt, and after a bit of to-and-fro a replacement RCBO was agreed.
RCBO Replaced On Friday 30th August
An electrician came from the PV installers to replace the RCBO and service was restored. but only for a day, on the 31st, power was being exported until maybe 2pm and then nothing. That evening, when I returned home, the RCBO had popped again.
It sees very suspicious to me that a system that had been working so well for months could suddenly develop a fault when the smartmeter was fitted! Could some sort of earth problem have been created, and this led to the RCBO failing completely? And it's not as if we were exporting more power than before, the graphs I've captured show we hit higher peak electricity generation in July!
I'd be very grateful for any ideas, even if it's just things to inspect. I'm not certified to work on domestic mains, as I'm retired from being an electronics engineer, but I can at least understand the principles, ask the right questions and cautiously take measurement with generic multimeters.
The only hint of progress is that the smart meter people are coming soon to fit the gas meter which they were unable to do last time, and will inspect the wiring on the electricity meter too. I did check the earth bonding when the first RCBO died and it all seemed good, using my limited set of test equipment (Fluke m/m and such) to see if there was any measurable potential between the earth point in the Growatt box and the neutrals, and there was none.
thanks!
When the PV system was working, when the sun rose, the grid draw dropped as the PV took the load, a little later the the battery would charge, and after the battery was full, excess power was exported. If there was a high level of demand, even during the day, battery power would be drawn rather than pull from the grid.
I have a Sofar Hybrid Inverter and a Pylontech 7.2kWh pack, and a Growatt power conditioner (which reduces the 245 to 247V of my local grid down to 225 to 227 ish). It's the Growatt which is the source of my headaches. As far as I can tell, the Growatt is really just a toroidal auto-transformer, with additional RCDs and circuit breakers for protection, and some protective windings in the transformer to detect shielding faults and safely trip things.
Here's my attempt at annotating it:
Everybody was happy. Well, apart from the fact I didn't get paid for exporting energy, because I had no smart meter. Finally, I got a date.
The Landis+Gyre smart meter was fitted on the 19th August.
The day after the smart meter was fitted, I observed that the solar shut down after the battery was charged, there was no export at all, nor was the house being powered by the PV/Battery system. When I looked closely, I found that the RCBO, which is between the PV/Battery system and the grid connection, had failed completely and couldn't be re-engaged. There was no exterior sign of damage - no scorching etc. I contacted the PV/battery installer, and a tech person at Growatt, and after a bit of to-and-fro a replacement RCBO was agreed.
RCBO Replaced On Friday 30th August
An electrician came from the PV installers to replace the RCBO and service was restored. but only for a day, on the 31st, power was being exported until maybe 2pm and then nothing. That evening, when I returned home, the RCBO had popped again.
It sees very suspicious to me that a system that had been working so well for months could suddenly develop a fault when the smartmeter was fitted! Could some sort of earth problem have been created, and this led to the RCBO failing completely? And it's not as if we were exporting more power than before, the graphs I've captured show we hit higher peak electricity generation in July!
I'd be very grateful for any ideas, even if it's just things to inspect. I'm not certified to work on domestic mains, as I'm retired from being an electronics engineer, but I can at least understand the principles, ask the right questions and cautiously take measurement with generic multimeters.
The only hint of progress is that the smart meter people are coming soon to fit the gas meter which they were unable to do last time, and will inspect the wiring on the electricity meter too. I did check the earth bonding when the first RCBO died and it all seemed good, using my limited set of test equipment (Fluke m/m and such) to see if there was any measurable potential between the earth point in the Growatt box and the neutrals, and there was none.
thanks!
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