home brew no export

electrofelon

Senior Member
Location
Cherry Valley NY, Seattle, WA
Occupation
Electrician
Say you had an existing GT system where the inverters had no capability to do a no export function. Is there a simple off the shelf device that could do this? I am thinking all you would need is a CT and a simple circuit that PWMs a SSR to a dump load of come sort. The midnite classic charge contoller basically has that capability, but for DC sysems.
 
Why do you want that? If the POCO requires no export then you have no choice, but I have heard people say that they just don't want to give kWh to the utility, in which case it is probably not worth spending any money to accomplish that. Don't stick it to yourself trying to stick it to the man.
 
Why do you want that? If the POCO requires no export then you have no choice, but I have heard people say that they just don't want to give kWh to the utility, in which case it is probably not worth spending any money to accomplish that. Don't stick it to yourself trying to stick it to the man.
Sort of just a thought experiment, but could be a practical matter for me. I am adding to my existing solar system and for a variety of reasons I do not want to update the interconnect agreement. They probably won't notice the extra output, but if it comes to it I may want to cap the export to a maximum value.
 
If you need to be _strict_ with zero export, I don't think you could do anything line interactive and be absolutely sure you always have zero export.

A plausible 'home brew' approach for strict zero export would be an off grid PV system that uses mains power to charge the batteries in addition to PV; such a system could _never_ supply power to the grid, but would be less efficient for grid consumption since you always have AC-DC-AC conversion.

But in your case you don't need to be strict, since you have an interconnect agreement. You just want your revised system to have output that looks generally like your original system. For this you just need some amount of automated control that turns on optional loads whenever your PV production gets too high.

I think you could pull that off with 'home assistant'; monitor energy flow using an of a number of energy monitors that put CTs on the mains connection, and then control loads such as minisplits or water heaters or the like. I don't know if such a system would be quite stable enough, but it certainly is homebrew :)
 
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