Most Popular Topics
Collapse
Please help me decide on which way to go. (enPhase vs SolarEdge vs LG)
Collapse
X
-
-
24xLG300N+SE7600 [url]http://tiny.cc/n7ucvx[/url]Comment
-
Yes, that's what I thought. But I can't explain the difference between the end-of-day production reported by the dashboard, and calculation by summing up all the 15-min wattages and divide by 4. The latter is always smaller by roughly 2-3%. I'm hoping you're right that the dashboard is the actual production, but the number seems a little too good comparing to Enphase (which on paper should have efficiency within 1% from SE).
I've come up with no better explanation than SE is trying to make their system look better than the competition's by publishing high energy numbers, but still within the ±5% spec they need to meet to be compliant with CEC, among others. When I've pushed hard enough on the SE tech that I got passed to an engineer, they did not confirm or deny it, they just say that 5% is their spec and revenue grade monitoring is required if you want better.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
-
CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
Sometime soon I'll share some comparison charts showing SE reported power vs revenue grade measured power, but I'm working on some other analysis at the moment first. Also, just to get in front of a possible objection... the CT's for my revenue grade meter are actually located inside the inverter, so termination or wire resistance shouldn't really be coming into play.
Really, SE is taking as much liberty with their numbers as they can, and while other inverters (Enphase, SMA) seem to do this a little bit, I think they tend to stick closer to the truth. It doesn't make SE a bad system... just, if accurate monitoring is your thing, SE gets an F for that.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
Sometime soon I'll share some comparison charts showing SE reported power vs revenue grade measured power, but I'm working on some other analysis at the moment first. Also, just to get in front of a possible objection... the CT's for my revenue grade meter are actually located inside the inverter, so termination or wire resistance shouldn't really be coming into play.
This is a gross consumption chart... the Tecolote Canyon system is using SE 5 min data (power, not energy), and the -Test system is using the EKM Meter (revenue grade) to report solar generation. Gross Consumption is calculated from generation and net consumption. Net consumption comes from an Eagle device, through Wattvision, and is the same for both systems (as you can see during the hours when the sun is down).
You can see early in the day, both systems show about the same gross consumption, and they maintain the same baseline established when the sun wasn't out. Later in the day, the SE generation has drifted slightly higher, pulling up the calculated gross consumption number to compensate, at a level that is higher than the baseline. The revenue grade system is continuing to maintain the same baseline, as might be expected.
The end result was that SE reported more energy than the revenue grade system.
EKM Meter: 20.85 kWh
SE sum of 5 or 15 min Power, multiplied by time: 21.00 kWh (0.7% above EKM)
SE Energy (from the SE portal): 21.63 kWh (3.0% above SE power, 3.7% above EKM)
I changed the parameters of the test after that day, so scrolling to days forward or backward may be comparing different things.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
The daily data we have from the logs shows a much different story.
I have a 10KW Enphase I installed and a 10KW Solar Edge installed. Both have zero shading and perfect south views at the same angle.
In the winter the Solar Edge makes 6 to 8kw a day more due to the panel power being so much higher in the cold and the Enphase flat tops.
In the heat of summer there near even. Down south it don't matter but up in the northern Midwest it matters ever winter day.
If a panel in the cold makes over 300 watts -- it's best to be able to use it.
Watching all these systems on line shows the real picture.Comment
-
Rather than believing blanket statements about which will perform better various conditions, it can easily be modeled using PVWatts or SAM. The amount lost to clipping can be estimated and valued at the appropriate cost per kWh. The OP in this case is not in the mid-west, and data from those systems in that location seems odd to bring up.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
Any time you see a report made and paid for by a company beware.
The daily data we have from the logs shows a much different story.
I have a 10KW Enphase I installed and a 10KW Solar Edge installed. Both have zero shading and perfect south views at the same angle.
In the winter the Solar Edge makes 6 to 8kw a day more due to the panel power being so much higher in the cold and the Enphase flat tops.
Watching all these systems on line shows the real picture.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
-
I bought a TED5000 and set it up a few days ago.
The TED5000 reports via pvoutput.org that for today (5/12) I produced 57.47kwh
The Solaredge monitoring website says I produced 58.54kwh
(1.8% higher reported by SE)
The TED5k only is measuring 1 leg (120V, not 240V), so there could be some error introduced there.
And I see yesterday 56.644kwh vs. 58.696kwh (3.6% difference) so it's not a constant % difference.
Yesterday and today had some clouds so some error could be due to sampling rate/size.
And it's quite possible that my TED is off - they claim +/-2% and SE claims +/- 5%.
But it seems likely that SE is calibrated to report slightly higher.Comment
-
Comment
-
As I already said, TED says +/-2% for TED5000.
SE says +/-5%.
Of course neither are revenue grade.
Although I think SE has that option available if you want to pay for it. If you'd like to buy me a new inverter with the revenue grade feature, I'll be happy to hook it up.Comment
-
The revenue grade add on for Solaredge can be installed at any time. .. It is just a wattnode revenue grade meter with Ct's, costs maybe $400. The rs-485 protocol to talk to it is built into the Solaredge firmware, so the wattnode numbers become available through the Solaredge portal. For a few reasons, i preferred the ekm meter that i just installed, but could pass along the SE whitepaper on integrating wattnode to anyone interested.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
If you're going to bother to reply, at least read the entire post.
As I already said, TED says +/-2% for TED5000.
SE says +/-5%.
Of course neither are revenue grade.
Although I think SE has that option available if you want to pay for it. If you'd like to buy me a new inverter with the revenue grade feature, I'll be happy to hook it up.
There are many meters available for residential use that are revenue grade - cheaper than TED for sure.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
Comment