Originally posted by philips
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Does This seem right?
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally posted by philips View Post240 hot to hot is still single phase.Comment
-
Originally posted by SunEagle View Post
True, but that meter is not looking for a "hot to hot" power. It is looking for a "hot to neutral" input.Comment
-
Originally posted by jflorey2 View PostYes, but it is twice the voltage. A current sense transformer can sense only current, not voltage. It must assume a certain voltage to calculate power. If it is assuming the wrong voltage, you will get the wrong power numbers.Comment
-
Originally posted by philips View Post
I don't know what meter he is using, but the diagram just shows AC voltage - doesn't list neutral anywhere. If he has the volt meter connected to both hots to read the ~240V and the CT where it is currently connected, he should get the correct power reading.
So with 1 CT I will have to say the meter is looking for the "hot to neutral" measurement for the reference voltage of what the load is using.
A meter that will measure what a home is using from their 240 volt "single phase" main panel includes 2 CT's not 1.Comment
-
Originally posted by SunEagle View Post
A meter that will measure what a home is using from their 240 volt "single phase" main panel includes 2 CT's not 1.
Comment
-
Originally posted by philips View Post
He stated that he is measuring his "4 panels" so I assume that the power meter is on the circuit for his micros which will have zero current on the neutral, so only one CT is needed.Comment
-
Originally posted by SunEagle View Post
You might be correct but I thought those panels were connected to micro inverters which use both hot legs to produce their power.Comment
-
Here is an update with a meter on each 120VAC leg. This at about 11 AM in full sun.
I noticed that it took a few minutes for the meters to show any Amp reading.
I have reset the KWH to zero.
07-05-18--11am.jpgComment
-
Originally posted by Aston72 View PostHere is an update with a meter on each 120VAC leg. This at about 11 AM in full sun.
I noticed that it took a few minutes for the meters to show any Amp reading.
I have reset the KWH to zero.
07-05-18--11am.jpgComment
-
Originally posted by philips View Post
If you're going to run two meters then you will need to sum the power and energy readings to get the total. So in your picture you are producing 728W, which sounds reasonable for your panels. If you looked at the amp reading shortly after turning the power on, remember that there is a minimum 5 minute delay before the micros will generate power.
I am going to take readings at noon and 1 PM.Comment
-
-
Originally posted by philips View Post
Yes, they use both hot legs, and the neutral is only used for voltage verification of each split phase. The current on each leg will be the same, so only one CT is needed - but the voltage needs to be measured across both hot legs to get the correct power reading.Comment
-
Originally posted by sdold View PostI'm impressed at how closely the two devices' current readings match.Comment
-
Here is an update.
Readings-08-06-18.jpg
It has been a month now and here are the readings.
It appears that for the last 30 or 31 days, the panels have produced about 120KWH.
I would say that it has been about 25% more sunny than average this summer for the time period.
In Winter, there are many more cloudy days and some days the panels are covered with snow.
Since the panels are connected directly to my home power panel and I do not have
a meter that pays me for the generation of the power, I wonder if I am getting the full benefit.
Comment
Comment