Electric-Light
Senior Member
I meant hot as in having non-isolated ties to the grid.Every part of a PV system is 'hot', regardless, when the sun is shining and the utility side breaker is on. Optimizer systems excepted.
Minimum as in omitting everything they can get away with to lower cost.Interesting.
The page you linked to has a paragraph that begins "Line commutated inverters do no provide significant fault current." With that said, that page doesn't seem to be addressing the differences between grounded and ungrounded inverters.
I don't know where your understanding of 'bare minimum filtration components' comes from. I believe that both types of inverters would have to meet the same IEEE standards for their output. Some of those TL inverters are really heavy with capacitors, too.
Yes it does. Ungrounded/Grounded seems to really mean isolated vs non-isolated in this context and it shows an example of each.Well, they don't have any diagrams of ungrounded inverters in that PDF. That's not a particularly useful document for this discussion.
The transformer on left is the utility feeder. The neutral(knot) is grounded by the utility You can see that everything from the transformer on is directly connected. So, any part of the system coming in contact with grounded structure has the full fault current of the feeder available.Even if what you say were true, fault current would be no worse than on an AC circuit of the same rating as the inverter output. So...not more hazardous than other AC circuits.

Also, a fault in the static converter can energize the grid side connection with battery voltage.
If you used a transformer with only your PV connected to it, the transformer servers as the galvanic isolation between point of coupling and solar.