Curious what would be the effect of sustained category 4 or 5 winds on large solar installations and offshore wind farms.
Probably not much. Turbine pitch can be zero.Curious what would be the effect of sustained category 4 or 5 winds on large solar installations and offshore wind farms.
They still have a massive frontal area that gets hit by wind and absorbs forces.Probably not much. Turbine pitch can be zero.
Most grid tied inverter systems don't allow the panels to feed the house when there is no grid power sensed. There are some exceptions that allow "islanding" with a battery backup and the solar panels, but they need extra, tested and certified safety systems to guarantee that during the outage no power is backfed into the grid.To what extent can residential solar panels be used in a power outage? Even without batteries, I've read of a setup that allows some power to be used by the house when it is sunny out.
To what extent can residential solar panels be used in a power outage? Even without batteries, I've read of a setup that allows some power to be used by the house when it is sunny out.
I walked a hearth.com member through coming to the conclusion that he couldn't afford not to install solar (his state had incredible incentives), I think he put in two SMA SPS systems. There are significant limitations with the SPS circuits but better than nothing. To really get a useful back up, it requires a battery system, it doesn't need to be huge but it and the required electronics ads far more cost than a generator.
Still, you'd exceed the cost of a decent 2 kW inverter generator without having as much overall versatility.
It comes down to how much you want to pay for a backup and what type of backup you want. If its an "end of the world as you know it" scenario the solution is going to be different then a couple of day situation. About 15 to 30 K over the cost of a conventional PV system, plus ongoing battery maintenance and replacement about every 8 to 10 years of 10K (whether you use the system or not) will buy you a very robust system.
Not much in the NW during late fall to early spring. It's why we have a small, efficient propane generator and a big reserve tank.Yes, but generators require a large amount of fuel, something that might be hard to replenish during an extended power outage. Solar panels would keep producing for extended periods.
Not much in the NW during late fall to early spring. It's why we have a small, efficient propane generator and a big reserve tank.
The Tesla Powerwall is fully guaranteed to last 10 years with daily discharge/recharge. If used only as a power back-up for outages it will last much longer than 10 years. Useable capacity is 13.5 kW for $5500.
The Tesla Powerwall is fully guaranteed to last 10 years with daily discharge/recharge. If used only as a power back-up for outages it will last much longer than 10 years. Useable capacity is 13.5 kW for $5500.
No such thing as a 13.5 kW battery, there is such a thing as a 13.5 kWh battery.
That is quite small for a PV system battery.
I believe the Powerwall is rated for 2 KW output rate. One major annoyance is Tesla doesnt readilly publish any spec sheets. I couldnt quickly find a charge rate but generally a safe assumption is the charge rate is roughly its output capacity so a standard Powerwall would be able to handle a 2kW PV array. This is great to run lights and small portable appliances but not so great for things like well pumps and AC units which have surge loads.
I would suggest a minimum would be two 13.5kWh batteries. Over the years in the northeast, I see most folks running 6 kW generators during extended blackouts to cover their well and refrigeration needs, some folks get away with 4 kW with load management and most permanent household generators installed are a minimum of 10KW. This would imply that 3 or 4 Powerwall batteries may be needed unless load management is put in place.
The devil is definitely in the details on the output side, there probably is some surge capacity in output on the battery but rarely does it match a typical start surge of an electric motor which is usually 3 times nameplate. I have seen a surge output rate of 3.3 kW for a Powerwall so two batteries might be able to handle the surge load from starting a 15 amp 240 volt across the line well pump. If the homeowner has a more modern well pump with variable speed drive with current limiting they may be able to squeak by with a single battery. .A Powerwall doesnt include a output inverter, using a 3.3 kW surge for one battery I would expect a known brand 3500 KW inverter with surge rating would be needed to keep it from kicking out. Of course if someone is trying to run a well pump at 240 volts they would be unable to run standard lighting and small appliance circuits without a step down transformer or some other circuity.
The off grid folks have already figured this out in great detail as they live constantly with a blackout since there is no grid. To date I see very few off grid systems with Powerwalls and the vast majority of the systems use lead acid chemistry with a very small minority using Nickel Iron. Batteries are a constant PITA for an off gridder and a big ongoing investment. I expect that if a Powerwall solution would be an advantage they would be buying them.
There are folks experimenting with LI batteries but they are home brewing battery packs and running into issues that lithium Ion batteries require very extensive battery management systems down to the cell level.
I have seen in the past, a category of "blackout busters" These typically are for homes that are in areas with poor power availability, usually rural areas where power may go down often enough that they want short term power, the systems dont run that often and are intended to ride through a couple of hours, basically a big UPS. In this case a Powerwall based solution may have some value but given the surge rating limitations I expect that there is standby generator and the fuel to run it in the background.
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