jbowman88
Member
- Location
- Renton, WA
Im working on an off-grid battery based PV system and a question concerning PV ground fault detection has come up. The system has a 1600W pole-mounted array that is connected to a building ~120ft away by an above-ground IMC/EMT run. The charge controller has a built in PV GFDI function that uses a 0.5 Amp fuse between PV(-) and GND. According to the manufacturer this feature only functions properly if the internal GFDI is the only (-) to GND bonding point for the DC system, which makes sense. When the system was installed, however, the DC(-) (negative battery cable) to GND bond inside the inverter panel was not removed.
I mostly understand the purpose of the PV GFDI (I think). What I am struggling with is the idea of ungrounding the entire DC system including the battery. The GFDI doesn't even resolve a fault if one where to occur(?) it just lets you know that one has occurred and then potentially leaves everything energized including the array, conduit runs, metallic enclosures, etc. How this a worthwhile trade off?
What am I not getting about this?
I mostly understand the purpose of the PV GFDI (I think). What I am struggling with is the idea of ungrounding the entire DC system including the battery. The GFDI doesn't even resolve a fault if one where to occur(?) it just lets you know that one has occurred and then potentially leaves everything energized including the array, conduit runs, metallic enclosures, etc. How this a worthwhile trade off?
What am I not getting about this?