nice. i'm going to be doing something similar this summer. i have 2 locations, 2 solar setups and want to make my own "off the grid" "grid". my concern is tho; i thought the grid tie inverters will only output to the grid if there is voltage on it... but i could just have to find a setting for that or something.
Victron and older outback inverter act as the grid, so then the grid tied inverter outputs power at 1volt higher than the victron output and slightly higher frequency
It appears below that cut out fuse you are missing a shroud which goes on the bottom of the fuse carrier to protect the cable where it is single insulated. I may be wrong due to the fact that I can’t examine it closely but they are very cheap and I recommend fitting one.
Great work Richard, big fan of AC coupling my self here been using it for years. However not so keen on the idea of using a lightweight inverter with no transformer to do it ;-) Your PV capacity should never exceed your inverters charging capacity. If using wind it should be double the output of your wind turbine ;-)
@@livingoffgridinscotland the Ginlong is a great inverter. The founder of the company 'Ginlong Jimmy' was at uni in Edinburgh with a Pal of mine. I have done trials for Powerspout using one of their inverters and several others. First class product and 'back in the day' a very approachable company. However for AC coupling I would always use a low frequency inverter like a Victron, Outback, Studer or SMA. Probably not so crucial with solar only applications but I'd be very dubious about AC coupling wind or hydro with one. Good luck, for applications like yours or mine (large with lots of inputs over several buildings) AC coupling rules ;-)
I have been doing this for years, it works great as long as you don't exceed the load when your batteries are full unless your inverter can control the hertz from the grid tied inverter so keep your grid tied portion at 80% of your inverter rated max power. I would also run my generator through a separate inverter just for charging the battery when there is not enough sun.
Could you help with a wiring diagram! I am familiar with off-grid systems. So how does a cat chase its tail? Most micro-inverters require a Grid to turn on. It would make sense to use AC for appliances in place of having to reconvert back from DC,
I have Shneider XWpro and I plan to do exactly what you did here. I'm sure it can do it. I am only concerned what will happen if I have full solar production, batteries at 100% and just a few watts of consumption.
How does the Victron with a triac dimmer? I have microinverters, I use excess energy to heat water using 5kW dimmer (with Arduino and smart meter). I plan to add Victron but I would like to continue using the dimmer for heating water, for example when the battery is fully charged. Is it possible, maybe you solved this in another way? I don't want to lose energy by shifting the frequency, I prefer to heat :)
I love it! Can i ask.. the "grid" the inverter is tied to, is that 230 or 380volt ? I cant seem to find that info anywhere.. Cheers from a diy'er in Denmark!
@livingoffgridinscotland thanks for the reply! I have a grid tie inverter on hand that i want to connect off the grid, and your video was very helpfull!
Which Victron Plus do you reccomend . I found Phoenix 12/500 & a Multiplus 12/500/20? Also,😳 what about these off-grid solar inverter /mppt charge controllers? They seem like they could do the same thing but alot cheaper. Idk😆
Stick with Victor, especially for AC coupled then multiply line I know handles it and I would recommend sticking with that. It’s a bit expensive but worth it. The size you need depends on your expected usage but you can only car the same rating as the inverter.
They are different versions of the victron out now. 1 has 1 AC in and 2 AC out like yours. Another has 1AC in & 1 AC out which is cheaper 384 $. So the rating 12/500/20 is BV/PV/AMPS OUT? That's confusing to me. Also exactly from your GTI the ac is to your victron to the AC in ? And where do your 2 AC outs connect to. Also can you use one way diodes to keep the system from back charging into your DC to AC inverter?
The only thing I can see as a problem is that the main inverter doesn't know how much AC wattage is coming in so it won't know to maximize the charge. I'm interested to see how you are over coming this
Interesting ... if the panels producing power to the grid-tie stop because of night time, and stop sending power to the Multi, how does it recognize that there is a fake grid on start up? Are you running on batteries to the Multi to create the AC that the grid -tie needs to start up?
this might sound like a daft question but il ask anyway i want to run appliances in my shed with this type of invertor can i just add a 4 gang plug toi the ac out and then plug stuff in like printers e.c.t or not cos im a bit confused, i get the solar bit coming in its the ac bit thats confusing me so can i or not
I’m sure I explained this in the video? Only 5% losses using ac coupling, it’s 30% losses going into the batteries and back out, it also allows us to use diversion via pwm controllers so excess power can be used for heating and hot water via dump loads using a relay driver
I think that makes sense. A grid tied inverter is just intended to turn off when the grid goes down so that it doesn't electrocute someone working on the grid. The grid tied inverter has no idea if the other power it senses comes from an alternator/generator or from the actual grid as far as I know. Instead of helping the grid, it's helping some other AC source.
I just bought a solaredge SE6000 watt GTI w/4650 watt panel array & im a newby to this concept . My current off grid setup is 2200 watt PV x 4 60amp mppt controllers with 1200ah Gsm deep cycle batteries. Could you tell me how to create my own grid. & Thank you for your help. 😇
So the inverters your referring to won't back feed and blow the mofsets? Ok so swap out my Jupiter 10k for the victron and connect both to a combiner box then to my relay panel in the house/camper?
I had another idea. What if I connected the AC from my current solar battery bank inverter to a combiner box then added the AC line from my Solaredge. But the line from my current inverter put in one way 10 amp diodes. Wouldn't that signal to my Solaredge that there's a grid and when current increased it wouldn't back feed my inverter and just work for whatever I wanted?
Hi, My question is that, is there any way to program the grid tide inverter to be able to use an off grid inverter even if it requires or it will certainly require an isolating contractor to isolate the grid from Technically speaking this is doable since basically it's an inverter converting DC 48v from solar to AC 220, the difference is that it also synchronizes the phase angles with grid to work parallel and control the voltage to control the current flow direction to either flow into the grid the extra power or flow out of the grid just incase, ... I can also understand that the peak power rating will or may be changed from grid to off-grid setting but it must work, So I am really not able to understand why grid inverters can only be used with grid only and cannot be used off-grid if required, ... For me the answer may only be the commercial reason so that people will have to buy two inverters 😊 or it's an regulatory requirements, To achieve this some people used a small power generator to fool the grid inverter by simulating the grid and it actually did work, the downside of this setup was additional capex and little addition of opex of diesel consumption. Can you please help me to understand
I realy dont get how it work, µthe grid tie inverter will go full load , what if you don't use this load? where does the electricity goes? i don't get it, ok you recharge the battery but what if the grid tie inverter produce more than u use? where does that electricity go? since the grid tie inverter can only do one thing and it's produce as much as he can ? you can only do that with a victron?
Most people set up diversion loads such as electric heaters or hot water so when you have lots of electric in the morning and your batteries are full then a diversion module or relay such as a Morningstar relay driver turns on loads to use that surplus
It is like you are talking to me, because I do not know what I am doing when it comes to this. Is there a Solar Power Class 101 professor before I jump into this 202 class, just kidding but I want to know more about this stuff.
"make your own grid" = use the AC out of an inverter to provide "mains" power. Its called creating a micro grid. "AC coupled" = solar controller outputs AC instead of DC to use with Victron in an off grid scenario, the grid tie inverter needs to respond to changes in the frequency so that the grid tie inverter backs off power in case the batteries are full. Otherwise you can overcharge your batteries.
Or you can use a battery voltage monitor to switch off the AC connection to the Grid Tie Inverter when the battery gets close to full ... or switch off the DC Solar input to the Grid Tie Inverter (that's a bit trickier because of DC switching at higher voltages ... though can certainly be done with mosfets etc) I have a similar AC Coupled system and my Grid Tie Inverter automatically throttles back as the AC output rises ... so I haven't needed to add any switching ... though I'll be watching carefully when summer comes around. During winter, I just switch on some of our underfloor heating circuits and burn off 6kW while the sun is shining nicely ... and if still plenty, turn on a couple of additional heaters.
@@mattsaulsbury1831 the victron multiplus or Quattro is an inverter charger and creates a “mini grid” the grid tied inverter senses this as the grid and powers up, feeds power to the grid constantly, the victron uses surplus power that isn’t used to charge the batteries, you do need dump or diversion loads in the event that batteries are full and you arnt using all the power the panels are using
You lose more energy going from 500vdc to 230vac and into the other shed and then a battery charger than using 4mm PV cable to take the dc to the other shed. So efficiency wise you’re doing the wrong thing.
@@briansmall_ca not really, the point is this inverter overrides the victron so the power will be used first and only the excess will be charged into the batteries. We also have standard charge controllers, it’s part of a bigger system, you get 30% losses going panels-charge controller-batteries-inverter, this system you get approximately 5% losses
@@livingoffgridinscotland Interesting. I’ll go back through your videos to get a better sense of your system. I’m not looking just to be critical 😉. I am in the process of developing an acreage in the middle of nowhere Saskatchewan. It’s currently grid connected but solar is on the todo list. By training, and occasionally by profession, I’m an industrial control systems technologist but I have little experience with solar.
It’s very much a case of “horses for courses” I’m seeing most of the proper off grid guys over here using a combination of standard off grid kit and these modern grid tied inverters then running their big loads when they have lots of power coming in, so setting timers for electric heating, hot water etc to take advantage of the power when it’s available to save storing it in batteries….
4mm no way. Maybe you mistyped. 10mm if there's any distance. And don't forget the cost of the MPPT he will have to add to the system. Thick DC cables and mppt will way exceed the cost of the grid tie inverter
You are Doing it Right sir! Congrats to you. From Canada.
Ignore those men who do not understand what we are doing. Nice Work!
Well said!
nice. i'm going to be doing something similar this summer. i have 2 locations, 2 solar setups and want to make my own "off the grid" "grid".
my concern is tho; i thought the grid tie inverters will only output to the grid if there is voltage on it... but i could just have to find a setting for that or something.
Victron and older outback inverter act as the grid, so then the grid tied inverter outputs power at 1volt higher than the victron output and slightly higher frequency
It appears below that cut out fuse you are missing a shroud which goes on the bottom of the fuse carrier to protect the cable where it is single insulated. I may be wrong due to the fact that I can’t examine it closely but they are very cheap and I recommend fitting one.
Great work Richard, big fan of AC coupling my self here been using it for years. However not so keen on the idea of using a lightweight inverter with no transformer to do it ;-) Your PV capacity should never exceed your inverters charging capacity. If using wind it should be double the output of your wind turbine ;-)
What inverter would you suggest?
The Ginlong/solis was recommended by several people on Facebook…..
@@livingoffgridinscotland the Ginlong is a great inverter. The founder of the company 'Ginlong Jimmy' was at uni in Edinburgh with a Pal of mine. I have done trials for Powerspout using one of their inverters and several others. First class product and 'back in the day' a very approachable company. However for AC coupling I would always use a low frequency inverter like a Victron, Outback, Studer or SMA. Probably not so crucial with solar only applications but I'd be very dubious about AC coupling wind or hydro with one. Good luck, for applications like yours or mine (large with lots of inputs over several buildings) AC coupling rules ;-)
I have been doing this for years, it works great as long as you don't exceed the load when your batteries are full unless your inverter can control the hertz from the grid tied inverter so keep your grid tied portion at 80% of your inverter rated max power. I would also run my generator through a separate inverter just for charging the battery when there is not enough sun.
Could you help with a wiring diagram! I am familiar with off-grid systems. So how does a cat chase its tail? Most micro-inverters require a Grid to turn on. It would make sense to use AC for appliances in place of having to reconvert back from DC,
Hi, the wiring diagram is available on the Victron site. PV inverter grid tie inverter is a cheap way of getting a 600v array.
I have Shneider XWpro and I plan to do exactly what you did here. I'm sure it can do it. I am only concerned what will happen if I have full solar production, batteries at 100% and just a few watts of consumption.
You need to set up either a dump load or diversion load to divert the excess power to heaters or hot water
How does the Victron with a triac dimmer? I have microinverters, I use excess energy to heat water using 5kW dimmer (with Arduino and smart meter).
I plan to add Victron but I would like to continue using the dimmer for heating water, for example when the battery is fully charged.
Is it possible, maybe you solved this in another way? I don't want to lose energy by shifting the frequency, I prefer to heat :)
I love it! Can i ask.. the "grid" the inverter is tied to, is that 230 or 380volt ? I cant seem to find that info anywhere..
Cheers from a diy'er in Denmark!
@@pim3fifty 240v in uk
@livingoffgridinscotland thanks for the reply! I have a grid tie inverter on hand that i want to connect off the grid, and your video was very helpfull!
Aren't you suppose to use concrete backer board and not plywood or drywall for mounting hardware?
I can’t find anything in the 18th edition regs regarding this…..
My other system is on 1mm galvanized steel sheet
Which Victron Plus do you reccomend . I found Phoenix 12/500 & a Multiplus 12/500/20? Also,😳 what about these off-grid solar inverter /mppt charge controllers? They seem like they could do the same thing but alot cheaper. Idk😆
Stick with Victor, especially for AC coupled then multiply line I know handles it and I would recommend sticking with that. It’s a bit expensive but worth it. The size you need depends on your expected usage but you can only car the same rating as the inverter.
They are different versions of the victron out now. 1 has 1 AC in and 2 AC out like yours. Another has 1AC in & 1 AC out which is cheaper 384 $. So the rating 12/500/20 is BV/PV/AMPS OUT? That's confusing to me. Also exactly from your GTI the ac is to your victron to the AC in ? And where do your 2 AC outs connect to. Also can you use one way diodes to keep the system from back charging into your DC to AC inverter?
Are you using any electric from the grid ❤
@@sccobyste we are totally off grid
The only thing I can see as a problem is that the main inverter doesn't know how much AC wattage is coming in so it won't know to maximize the charge. I'm interested to see how you are over coming this
Interesting ... if the panels producing power to the grid-tie stop because of night time, and stop sending power to the Multi, how does it recognize that there is a fake grid on start up? Are you running on batteries to the Multi to create the AC that the grid -tie needs to start up?
Yes we are off grid so we have batteries
Can we connect a small UPS to power the Ongrad inverter to operate without a power grid?
No, that won’t work
this might sound like a daft question but il ask anyway i want to run appliances in my shed with this type of invertor can i just add a 4 gang plug toi the ac out and then plug stuff in like printers e.c.t or not cos im a bit confused, i get the solar bit coming in its the ac bit thats confusing me so can i or not
@@thediscoman2001 no as it doesn’t output power unless it recognizes the grid
You’d need an off grid inverter that has an “islanding” mode
@@livingoffgridinscotland thank you
I've never done this before. Can someone explain how this would be more beneficial than just taking AC power straight from the victrons?
I’m sure I explained this in the video?
Only 5% losses using ac coupling, it’s 30% losses going into the batteries and back out, it also allows us to use diversion via pwm controllers so excess power can be used for heating and hot water via dump loads using a relay driver
I think that makes sense. A grid tied inverter is just intended to turn off when the grid goes down so that it doesn't electrocute someone working on the grid. The grid tied inverter has no idea if the other power it senses comes from an alternator/generator or from the actual grid as far as I know. Instead of helping the grid, it's helping some other AC source.
Yes exactly
Hi may I know which Victron multiplus inverter did you use for this setup.
You can use any multiplus, provided the charging capacity is higher than the pv output
I just bought a solaredge SE6000 watt GTI w/4650 watt panel array & im a newby to this concept . My current off grid setup is 2200 watt PV x 4 60amp mppt controllers with 1200ah Gsm deep cycle batteries. Could you tell me how to create my own grid. & Thank you for your help. 😇
You need an inverter charger on your off grid system like the victron phoenix or Quattro, and couplet the gti to the ac output on the victron
So the inverters your referring to won't back feed and blow the mofsets? Ok so swap out my Jupiter 10k for the victron and connect both to a combiner box then to my relay panel in the house/camper?
I had another idea. What if I connected the AC from my current solar battery bank inverter to a combiner box then added the AC line from my Solaredge. But the line from my current inverter put in one way 10 amp diodes. Wouldn't that signal to my Solaredge that there's a grid and when current increased it wouldn't back feed my inverter and just work for whatever I wanted?
Hi,
My question is that, is there any way to program the grid tide inverter to be able to use an off grid inverter even if it requires or it will certainly require an isolating contractor to isolate the grid from
Technically speaking this is doable since basically it's an inverter converting DC 48v from solar to AC 220, the difference is that it also synchronizes the phase angles with grid to work parallel and control the voltage to control the current flow direction to either flow into the grid the extra power or flow out of the grid just incase, ... I can also understand that the peak power rating will or may be changed from grid to off-grid setting but it must work,
So I am really not able to understand why grid inverters can only be used with grid only and cannot be used off-grid if required, ... For me the answer may only be the commercial reason so that people will have to buy two inverters 😊 or it's an regulatory requirements,
To achieve this some people used a small power generator to fool the grid inverter by simulating the grid and it actually did work, the downside of this setup was additional capex and little addition of opex of diesel consumption.
Can you please help me to understand
I realy dont get how it work, µthe grid tie inverter will go full load , what if you don't use this load? where does the electricity goes? i don't get it, ok you recharge the battery but what if the grid tie inverter produce more than u use? where does that electricity go? since the grid tie inverter can only do one thing and it's produce as much as he can ? you can only do that with a victron?
Most people set up diversion loads such as electric heaters or hot water so when you have lots of electric in the morning and your batteries are full then a diversion module or relay such as a Morningstar relay driver turns on loads to use that surplus
It is like you are talking to me, because I do not know what I am doing when it comes to this. Is there a Solar Power Class 101 professor before I jump into this 202 class, just kidding but I want to know more about this stuff.
"make your own grid" = use the AC out of an inverter to provide "mains" power. Its called creating a micro grid.
"AC coupled" = solar controller outputs AC instead of DC
to use with Victron in an off grid scenario, the grid tie inverter needs to respond to changes in the frequency so that the grid tie inverter backs off power in case the batteries are full. Otherwise you can overcharge your batteries.
Just to confirm, a dump load is also connected to the batteries as a fail safe through a tri star charge controller
Or you can use a battery voltage monitor to switch off the AC connection to the Grid Tie Inverter when the battery gets close to full ... or switch off the DC Solar input to the Grid Tie Inverter (that's a bit trickier because of DC switching at higher voltages ... though can certainly be done with mosfets etc)
I have a similar AC Coupled system and my Grid Tie Inverter automatically throttles back as the AC output rises ... so I haven't needed to add any switching ... though I'll be watching carefully when summer comes around.
During winter, I just switch on some of our underfloor heating circuits and burn off 6kW while the sun is shining nicely ... and if still plenty, turn on a couple of additional heaters.
@rogerweichert4672 what grid tie inverter are you using?
Awesome 👍
Thank you! Cheers!
Interesting!
Thanks!
i thought this was possible. basically just loop it around and fool the other one, and use it to feed each other??.......
everyone kept telling me u can't use one to create a grid and another one to feed it.
@@mattsaulsbury1831 the victron multiplus or Quattro is an inverter charger and creates a “mini grid” the grid tied inverter senses this as the grid and powers up, feeds power to the grid constantly, the victron uses surplus power that isn’t used to charge the batteries, you do need dump or diversion loads in the event that batteries are full and you arnt using all the power the panels are using
@@livingoffgridinscotlandwhat are you using as a load dump ❔👍
@@owenbruce4120 I’m using wire wound resistors
@@livingoffgridinscotland OK..feeding ac from the grid tie or dc from controller side ??
💎
I see you have grid out there. LOL just kidding
You lose more energy going from 500vdc to 230vac and into the other shed and then a battery charger than using 4mm PV cable to take the dc to the other shed. So efficiency wise you’re doing the wrong thing.
I was thinking about this as well.
@@briansmall_ca not really, the point is this inverter overrides the victron so the power will be used first and only the excess will be charged into the batteries.
We also have standard charge controllers, it’s part of a bigger system, you get 30% losses going panels-charge controller-batteries-inverter, this system you get approximately 5% losses
@@livingoffgridinscotland Interesting. I’ll go back through your videos to get a better sense of your system. I’m not looking just to be critical 😉. I am in the process of developing an acreage in the middle of nowhere Saskatchewan. It’s currently grid connected but solar is on the todo list. By training, and occasionally by profession, I’m an industrial control systems technologist but I have little experience with solar.
It’s very much a case of “horses for courses”
I’m seeing most of the proper off grid guys over here using a combination of standard off grid kit and these modern grid tied inverters then running their big loads when they have lots of power coming in, so setting timers for electric heating, hot water etc to take advantage of the power when it’s available to save storing it in batteries….
4mm no way. Maybe you mistyped. 10mm if there's any distance. And don't forget the cost of the MPPT he will have to add to the system. Thick DC cables and mppt will way exceed the cost of the grid tie inverter