Hi y'all. I'm in over my head. I had a friend whom has his own solar help me get mine together. I thought he was way more proficient. I just lit yesterday and I think its not running properly. Here's what I have. 8kw divided into 2kw sections being controlled with 4 Morningstar Tristar TS-MPPT-60 charge controllers. I have an Outback Radian series GS8048 inverter/charger. It sits atop an Outback load center. In there is a Flexnet DC that doesn't seem to be doing anything. Mounted to the outside is a Mate3 that I can't seem to access all the settings I need to. I have 8 vmax solar tank batteries, 4 in series paralleled. I am grid tied with the ability to sell when the power company gets me the new meter. I really don't even know the right questions to ask, or where to begin.
I'm over my head
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Hi y'all. I'm in over my head. I had a friend whom has his own solar help me get mine together. I thought he was way more proficient. I just lit yesterday and I think its not running properly. Here's whacharge controllerst I have. 8kw divided into 2kw sections being controlled with 4 Morningstar Tristar TS-MPPT-60 charge controllers. I have an Outback Radian series GS8048 inverter/charger. It sits atop an Outback load center. In there is a Flexnet DC that doesn't seem to be doing anything. Mounted to the outside is a Mate3 that I can't seem to access all the settings I need to. I have 8 vmax solar tank batteries, 4 in series paralleled. I am grid tied with the ability to sell when the power company gets me the new meter. I really don't even know the right questions to ask, or where to begin.
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The lights on the flexnet don't come on at all. Is it necessary to have in there? Do I have to do something to get my charge controllers to communicate with the mate3? Equalize won't run told I set up parameters. Can't find those set ups anywhereComment
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Very first thing you did wrong is you used 24 volt battery. It should have been 48 volts using just 2 80 amp controllers, or even better 96 volts.
Lastly if you live in the USA selling power to the ePOCO from batteries is a LOOSER. You are giving away money. It will cost you around $1/Kwh in battery cost to sell a Kwh for 15-cents.MSEE, PEComment
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CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
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Yes they are AGM. So they don't get equalized? Also we have had solid rain since I lit it. I'm guessing little to no electricity has been made. As far as the flexnet dc, any ideas why it doesn't light at all? Does the mate3 supercede it?Comment
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Do I have to do something to get my charge controllers to communicate with the mate3? Equalize won't run told I set up parameters. Can't find those set ups anywhere
Again, what do you want it to do that you think it is not doing?
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OK why are you running 4 x 60 amp controllers? It is still a miss match. My other concern is for your safety With 8000 watts @ 48 volt battery produces some 160 amps of charge current, and it takes one heck of a battery to take that kind of charge current. Me thinks you are no where close to a safe capacity because you stated you are using 12 volt batteries which was another huge mistake.
If those batteries are Flooded they need to be a minimum 1280 AH, and if AGM 650 AH. No way can a 12 volt battery be that large. It would take multiple parallel strings to get close to that using 12 volt batteries. Batteries that large require 2 and 4 volt batteries.
This will give you two very negative results.
1. A significant fire risk and thermal runaway. I seriously doubt you have the battery capacity to absorb 160 amps of charge current.
2. Extremely short battery life which will cause you great pain in the wallet. But I really do not care much about that. But your battery guy is going to love you as he will being seeing you shortly for replacement if they do not burn up first.
Good Luck.MSEE, PEComment
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These are the batteries I have.
Then I have four of these with three hundred amp fuses. One at each end of the four battery string, and one at each incoming cable.
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Also, The setup I have was designed by my buddy who I thought knew this stuff thoroughly. So the answer to why do I have 4 charge controllers? I thought they were to control 2 kw each. Beyond that, I don't know. It's why I'm here. I'm a carpenter and a farmer.Comment
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The batteries are completely inappropiate for your application, and grossly undersized for the amount of panel wattage you are applying to them. As you stated you have 8 Kw system and eight batteries. If you look at the spec you linked too it is easy to see the maximum safe solar power is 600 watts per battery. You have 1000 watts per battery. In addition to being too small, you should have never used 12 volt batteries or AGM. That forced you to install them in 4 parallel strings. There is no excuse to do that. What this means is you will be replacing all of them very soon if they do not go into thermal runaway first.
Just based on 8 Kw of panels you should have:
48 volt Battery using 2 volt 1200 AH FLA cells. That would be 24 batteries wired in series.
2 x 80 amp MPPT controllers.
48 volt Inverter
Sorry I wished I could help you, but I cannot. To put it into terms you can understand being a farmer is like me coming to you and say; I have 200 tomato plants, I live on a rock with no soil or sun. How do I plant them? All you could do is roll on the floor laughing at me..
Only thing I can offer you to at least make the system safe is remove 3200 watts of your panels and store them away or sell them along with one of your controllers.. The maximum power you can run with those 8 batteries is 4800 watts. 2000 watts to each controller is to much as they can only handle 1600 watts. You have 2000 watts which is way to much. Reconfigure with 3 1600 watt panel arrays using 3 of your 4 controllers. Do that, then at least it is safe. But with AGM batteries they will need replaced in a few short years. If you do not reconfigure your batteries will be destroyed shortly and possible a fire. Additionally with 2000 watts input to your controllers can and might have damaged the controllers.
Lastly reconsider who you call friends. You have at least one friend who gave you a recipe for bankruptcy and a fire to burn your house down.
If you want to do this right, determine how many watt hours you need in a day. Then design a system that works and is safe. Hope you have a good generator because any off-grider has to have one.
Good LuckMSEE, PEComment
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For what it is worth, I think Sunking is giving you good advice. Another alternative would be to re-orient most of the panels east and west. Done correctly, it will lower the peak power generated throughout the day without costing you much in overall energy harvest, and could help avoid overpowering your controllers.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
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