Joethemechanic
Senior Member
- Location
- Hazleton Pa
- Occupation
- Electro-Mechanical Technician. Industrial machinery
Seems odd that with the 9 volt battery nothing gave any indication of coming to life
I think mine did start to come up when PV started & the 9v battery did its job. I'm coming to the conclusion that with some, but very little, PV production, it tried to power the load, but it was >> the power available from PV (battery was depleted so couldn't help), it loaded the inverter so much, the voltage dropped below some threshold and the inverter gave up and tripped off. And stayed off until the grid came back up.Seems odd that with the 9 volt battery nothing gave any indication of coming to life
As I recall SE telling me, if the inverter is in backup mode and encounters an overload, it will shut down and try to start back up three times in fairly rapid succession. Not sure how quick that is. I believe it will try again sometime later, but no idea what the delay timing is. This might be how it works when cold start, it just has to try until PV production > load.I think mine did start to come up when PV started & the 9v battery did its job. I'm coming to the conclusion that with some, but very little, PV production, it tried to power the load, but it was >> the power available from PV (battery was depleted so couldn't help), it loaded the inverter so much, the voltage dropped below some threshold and the inverter gave up and tripped off. And stayed off until the grid came back up.
When the load was ~0, the inverter started when PV > 0 and didn't trip off since it was operating essentially open circuit.
Could be, but not what I observed. It was one-and-done. Once it OL'ed, it went completely dark (no LEDs) and no retries. I think what you describe might be how it works if the load > the max inverter capacity (> 7.6kW in my case). I recall the 3 tries feature. This is, I think, a different situation.As I recall SE telling me, if the inverter is in backup mode and encounters an overload, it will shut down and try to start back up three times in fairly rapid succession. Not sure how quick that is. I believe it will try again sometime later, but no idea what the delay timing is. This might be how it works when cold start, it just has to try until PV production > load.
Until it tries to power up, how could it know?I'm stuck that it doesn't know what the power required is until it tries.
That was exactly my point. (Probably not expressed clearly.)Until it tries to power up, how could it know?
Since the batteries used with Solaredge systems use DC-to-DC converters (fundamentally similar to solar optimizers), the DC voltage shown is not the cell voltage. (Cell voltage being zero isn't the same as SoC being zero either.) It also seems possible that the battery uploaded its data through the inverter after the inverter woke back up, and you wouldn't have seen this graph while the inverter was off.Here is a graph of 2/28/23 when one of our systems died overnight. I hadn't thought to look at this. The battery died at about 3:00 AM and came on at about 9:30 AM. A couple interesting things. The AC voltage is never zero, it is about 0.2V or so. And the DC voltage never drops to zero. The system seemed to stop supplying loads when the battery got to about 11%. In the morning, it looks like it used solar to charge the battery up to about 14% before it then kicked on the AC output again.
View attachment 2565391
This is normal. Most backup systems, even large commercial systems, do not provide backup for 100% of the normal grid-tied load. It's costly to get to that level. So they shed non-essential loads and back up the needed ones that allow someone to ride through the outage in relative comfort. But no hot tub parties.I think I'm convincing myself that it's working as designed/configured and I need to aggressively shed load in the event of a grid outage so the battery will last overnight. That would have 2 effects: delay or eliminate battery depletion, and allow black start to occur without tripping the inverter. Still, it would be nice to have a way to restart a tripped inverter without the grid.
When Solaredge first came out with the StorEdge to support the Powerwall 1 I got to attend an info session and the Solaredge presenter (a technical guy) was asked more than once how long that 9V battery was supposed to last. He screwed up his face in a way that revealed that the decision to use a 9V was definitely not his idea, and said "12 years??". His answer was the inverter warranty period.I find that amusing. The whole system restart depends on having a charged 9V in there. I've got $20k in batteries but it's useless without this extra $5 battery.![]()
It should at least have been designed to chirp like a smoke alarm when the battery gets lowWhen Solaredge first came out with the StorEdge to support the Powerwall 1 I got to attend an info session and the Solaredge presenter (a technical guy) was asked more than once how long that 9V battery was supposed to last. He screwed up his face in a way that revealed that the decision to use a 9V was definitely not his idea, and said "12 years??". His answer was the inverter warranty period.
The 9v battery is interesting in several respects. First, it's wrapped in shrink wrap to hide any labeling, no SE part number either, just blue shrink wrap. Can't tell if it's an ordinary alkaline, a long-life Lithium (like most current smoke detectors) or a rechargeable LiPo. It's readily accessible behind the connection cover, so something unique to the US market, perhaps? It's shipped separately in the inverter box and needs to be field-installed by the installer. The whole thing seems like a last-minute kluge. Do Europe & other non-US markets require the MLPE rapid shutdown required in (at least part of the) US? I suspect that the 9v cold start battery is somehow related to RSD & MLPE.I find that amusing. The whole system restart depends on having a charged 9V in there. I've got $20k in batteries but it's useless without this extra $5 battery.![]()
No.... Do Europe & other non-US markets require the MLPE rapid shutdown required in (at least part of the) US?
Maybe, but I don't see how RSD is that relevant. Your system doesn’t have to initiate RSD to stop outputting AC power.I suspect that the 9v cold start battery is somehow related to RSD & MLPE.