Just the right balance in presentation and stats. I am a subscriber. One point in a never perfect world. It may also be useful spending just £35 on a DIY swoop over of a fused spur connection to the hot water tank with a progammable controller where you have an off peak supply (Octopus-Go). Not as environmentally friendly granted but with a small PV array and larger battery storage capacity, this could be an initial approach. We are still trying to work out the export to grid issues when the battery is 100%. For us, this happens 1-2 hours during the day when the sun shines. Question for Octopus: Can you have an off peak tariff and still get paid for exporting? That sounds like having your cake and eating it.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words, Michael 🙂 Yes, that is the other approach, and to see how that works out in the utility - just do the following: 1. Select "Electricity" instead of "Gas" 2. Set the insufficient days to "365" (which essentially "turns off solar") 3. Make your investment £35 4. Set the cost of electricity to your off-peak rate Your question for Octopus is a good one... it does sound like having your cake and eating it, but off-peak is all about flattening the demand curve (good) and any export you sell is likely being used by your neighbour, which means less load on fossil fuel generators (also good). We just need a transmission/distribution network that can manage all that.
@garyogden58732 жыл бұрын
Re the sport whilst on Octopus- Go, having just got my Solar/Battery installed i checked this yes there is an export with GO but its a miserly £0.3p because its exactly like the cake and eat it! I'm going to do it just because I\m not giving it away for free😁
@duncanforrester61262 жыл бұрын
Re-export - Yes Octopus’ rate for a split tariff is just 4p, but you can export with anyone else regardless of supply under the SEG. Nobody pays a “fair” rate but 5-5.5p is available by shopping round. I had to, as Octopus will only accept genuine MCS certificates, not comparable QA schemes such as Flexi-Orb.
@hoverbovver2 жыл бұрын
@@duncanforrester6126 Problem for me as I export loads but don't have an MCS certificate
@mikejoseph425 Жыл бұрын
I think you can but it is only 4p kWh and the installation has to be carried out by an approved MCS contractor
@johnr11662 жыл бұрын
I've had a Solar I Boost for 8 years now. I get the FIT so no need to worry about export payment calculations. In that time I've sent over 7000 kwh to my water tank from my 4kw solar PV array. Now I no longer use my oil boiler to heat my hot water but use Octopus GO cheap rate tariff to top up my tank overnight and then let the sun replenish it during the day. That cuts my CO2 by loads which is the most important thing to me!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi John, sounds like you’re doing all the right things 👍🏻😀 And having the FiT payments certainly frees you from the temptation of putting export profit above CO2 reduction that many people will have to decide on now as export rates increase… 🤔
@davidshipp6232 жыл бұрын
I installed my Solar iboost 7 years ago with a 5KW array inverter limited. I did leave space to have thermal solar added for hot water and had a super-insulated thermal solar ready tank installed. The installer said I would never do it as the SolarEdge would give me all the hot water without any hassle. To date he has been right and it provides all hot water from the end of March until end of October and only requires a small top up from the boiler during winter. Again I have FIT payments so this makes it an easier calculation. It was certainly much cheaper than having a battery at the time, although I am now considering a battery on the DC side to reduce clipping and also maybe thermal solar as well to maximise total co2 reduction, but then it might be best still just to increase the PV array. Either way I love the solar I boost.
@buddywheels2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Gary, another exceptionally good video that sets the standard for all things renewable here on KZbin. Thorough, clear and concise, a great help, thank you again.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks very much, Steve! :-)
@trevorsmyth11 ай бұрын
This is such a helpful video thank you. The calculator helped me put data to my gut feeling that an Eddi hot water diverter for me would never pay back. Cheers.
@GaryDoesSolar11 ай бұрын
You're most welcome Trevor. Yeah, I nearly had one fitted myself... until I did the number crunching!
@youxkio2 жыл бұрын
Welcome back, Gary. Another great video. Thank you for sharing this great info!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Many thanks! :-)
@pulporock2 жыл бұрын
What a brilliant little video. Excellent, you nailed the topic. Cheers from Oz
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks very much 😀 Really happy to hear that!
@rowansmith2411 Жыл бұрын
We have a new water tank as part of a house refurbishment and were using Economy 7 to heat the water as we have no mains gas in the village. Just 2 of us in the house. Had solar fitted this week and have an Eddi fitted. I knew the payback should be good with current price of electricity (Octopus), but £196 (inc lost export when i get the smart meter) vs £477 is £281 annual saving - or a payback of 21 months! Great explanation and calculator!
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Rowan, thanks for taking the time to comment, and very happy to have helped you here! :-)
@duncanforrester61262 жыл бұрын
Great explanation video Gary, much appreciated. Without knowing these automatic devices existed, I installed a more primitive, but far cheaper addition to our system. A high current smart switch on the immersion heater spur works via the Smart Life app and Alexa. On days with excess solar, when our battery is full, I can easily switch on/off the heating element. It also provides a timer routine for 7.5p Octopus off-peak as an alternative. The smart switch only cost £25 and has already paid for itself!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
That's brilliant, Duncan! And just goes to show, you don't have to spend £hundreds or £thousands to get a great return! Thanks for the kind words about the video :-)
@susiebla27 Жыл бұрын
Hi Sounds very interesting. Can you tell me the name of the smart switch. I was also wondering if there is a device that not only controls the timings of the immersion heater but also can tell you the current temp of the water in the cylinder. The Tesla smart thermostat looked interesting but I don't think it's compatible with my cylinder. Ideally I need something I can control remotely with an app. Thanks
@peterhargrave2246 Жыл бұрын
Hey Gary I am a big fan for diverters as they work well in OZ... 1.Our grid is garbage that can make exporting difficult. 2. Reliability, cost and simplicty is a word better than a heatpump. 3. Our export tariff is miserable. 4. Average array size is constantly rising and export in Australia is regarded as waste. 5. A diverter turns the water heater into a thermal battery. 6. I can use a diverter to help stabilise the local grid by creating a more gentle export and not drive the grid volts through the roof.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Peter, thanks for sharing this insight about the consumer energy market in Australia. I'm hoping that new players like Octopus Energy (they're close by in NZ at the moment) enter your market and shake things up! :-)
@joschmoyo45322 жыл бұрын
I have a very simple diverter. It's called the on off switch. Utterly reliable.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Definitely something to be said for simplicity 😀 but wouldn’t work for me. I’d forget all the time 🤣
@joschmoyo45322 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar . It took my installer four months to sort out all the glitches with software on our new fronius battery inverter system. God knows how much more hassle it would have been tweaking a diverter. I've learned the hard way that the more you trust in automation, the lazier you get. I call manual switching voluntary rationing. Power is to expensive now to not be self disciplined.
@fauxlobster2 ай бұрын
Hi Gary, How smart are these diverters? By this I mean, can they be programmed to take into account different situations. For example, the max export on a G98 is 3.86 kW, so can the diverter be set up to only kick in if there is solar excess (house draw + 3.86kW export)? If so, can they be configured to not kick in during high tariff export periods? I’m also assuming that you would only need to use the immersion heater for short periods to get the water up to the desired temp, so will the diverter only kick in when that temp drops and for only as long as required to get back up to temp? If the aim is to be as green as possible and therefore paying back the initial outlay for the diverter is not considered part of the equation, but you want a mechanism to heat water in an environmentally friendly way, can the hot water system be configured to only use the diverter through the solar/battery and never draw from the grid? Thanks
@GaryDoesSolar2 ай бұрын
The EDDI unit I was considering at the time was quite intelligent, and could also perhaps be controlled by Home Assistant. However, in this follow-up video I made, I concluded that none of that mattered when you looked at the bigger picture against a backdrop of relatively high export rates: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKvGYppnl99jm6Msi=Jkvu5VWD1b9sQ_l- As export rates fall in line with increased grid-scale renewables however, the situation will change again, and solar diverters (with intelligent control like you suggest) could well be back on the table...
@richardhefty2 жыл бұрын
This is a great video and I like the utility. My only two comments are: 1) People should check back every month or so, with the gas prices changing so fast at the moment. 2) There is an argument in favour of being able to use solar to heat water to protect yourself from gas supply problems, or if you would just rather not be burning gas to keep warm on environmental grounds.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Richard. Thanks for the kind words 😀 Yeah, I totally agree with you on both points 👍🏻
@livingladolcevita7318 Жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, very interesting as I have recently had solar, 3.2 Kw and 2 batteries,6.4 Kw fitted but still exporting on some occasions. My hot water at the moment is now heated with a "Fischer" system using phase change materials and the gas now only supplies heating. Probably be different in the winter. I am considering buying some panels to direct feed an immersion heater in a small water tank. This would not be my main source of hot water but just to supply a shower and small sink, probably be used 3 times a week. Wondering if this would be viable. Actually thinking about it maybe get a battery and run an electric shower.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
If you're getting a battery for the electric shower, you may want to ensure it can discharge at the rate your shower needs it. See my video here (2m50s in): kzbin.info/www/bejne/aafadaWcqr2sn80
@simonreeves201711 ай бұрын
Hi Gary, greetings from Oxford. Thanks for this great channel! We don’t have solar (yet), but do have an EV and Octopus Go tariff. For us, gas is currently 15p per kWh, and cheap rate electricity is 7.5p per kWh. So we turned off water heating by the gas boiler, and added a timer to the immersion heater to heat our water with off-peak electricity. This saves us money, and reduces our emissions. In the summer months we now use no gas at all, as we swapped our old gas hob for an electric induction one.
@GaryDoesSolar11 ай бұрын
You're just down the road from me then :-) Thanks for the kind words. And it sounds like you're doing really well on the "green" front even without solar! Are you able to get solar where you are, and is it something you're considering?
@simonreeves201711 ай бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Hi Gary, thanks for engaging. We are Cumnor side of Oxford, I saw you use an example address of Wytham in a video, so you might be just a few miles away, if so, give my regards to The White Heart and the Post Office/Tea Shop - great scones! We are indeed looking at solar, but our roof is not ideal as the main slopes are East/West, we are definitely keen on the GivEnergy AIO battery, 9 or perhaps 13.5kWh with the aim of energy arbitrage, and will need some element of solar PV at the same time, as a battery alone will attract VAT. I’m quite practical, so am considering constructing a frame on the south facing gable end to place panels there at circa 40 degrees, otherwise I think we would see very little PV generation through the winter months with roof panels.
@GaryDoesSolar11 ай бұрын
@@simonreeves2017 Hi Simon, ah yeah - that was just an example location - I'm actually Southwest of Oxford - maybe only 30 minutes to Cumnor 🙂 Now, you might an East/West array is almost as good as a South array in fact. Two of my friends have East/West arrays and they publish their stats: Tim: kzbin.info/door/xT6jy59i_38H3Zy04VXzbg Dan: www.youtube.com/@DanEVSolar7
@DrBrightThomas2 жыл бұрын
excellent analysis and explanation. Just wondering if the solar diverter can contribute to central heating?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks the kind words. I guess the problem is that the diverter is managing the use of excess solar, and of course, central heating is generally required outside of those times. That said, use of a battery and heat pump would head in the right direction 👍🏻
@patrickvennard8382 ай бұрын
We have moved into a house with a solar diverter and pressure tank in the loft but it does not seem to work. I might consider getting someone to look at it, thanks for video.
@GaryDoesSolar2 ай бұрын
You're most welcome Patrick - and I hope you're able to get things sorted without too much trouble...
@geoffreycoan Жыл бұрын
Nice clear explanation of the pro’s and con’s of solar diverters and their payback. Your model can’t of course cater for everyone’s situation, such as having an air source heat pump like I do. I have considered a solar diverter but it just wasn’t something I got round to. In the non-winter months where the ASHP is only on to heat the hot water its using about 2-2.5kW a day which I’ve figured is probably low enough not to make it worthwhile changing
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Thanks Geoffrey :-) Not sure if you saw my follow up video to this one here too: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKvGYppnl99jm6M Yeah, ASHP is just a wonderful technology, especially when used in conjunction with solar and battery. I feel the days of solar inverters in the general market are numbered (so long as export rates remain above 12p/kWh ...
@geoffreycoan Жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Yes I did see that thanks and agree with your conclusion about the financial case not stacking up any more if you’re getting paid to export - and with rates at ~15p/kW it makes absolute sense to do so.
@keepsmiling1484 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing - very informative and certainly clarified the topic. With my home set up I have need to have my inverter in my garage remote from the house where my hot water immersion heater is located. Do you know how far away the sensors can be away from the actual solar diverter unit? Thx
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Some products, like Eddi allow the sensors to be far away by using a radio link (MyEnergi Hub) - worth a look. And the latest units just connect straight into your WiFi...
@anthonyallman91433 ай бұрын
Hi Gary - this video is exactly what i am thinking about at the moment and whether installing a diverter and immersion water heater/cylinder would be cost effective. I have a 13 year old solar system with the original solar tariff so I get paid for export no matter what is actually exported. So this means it doesn't matter how much i export as i will always be paid the same amount (50% of my generation). I have also got battery storage fitted and would like to use the spare energy i make and heat water. As a rough estimate, do you think it would be cost effective any pay back if i install an immersion heater/cylinder and diverter? Many thanks in advance
@GaryDoesSolar2 ай бұрын
Hi Anthony, yes - you're in a. very good situation being on the UK's Feed-in-tariff mechanism, and that can make operating a solar diverter more attractive. I'd try different scenarios using the calculator mentioned in the video, to see if it works out well.
@damenfeld5 ай бұрын
The video was very interesting and your calculator is extremely helpful. I heat my water using oil and assuming 70p per ltr this would be 7p/kW (10.35kW per ltr of heating oil) which makes a diverter very unattractive. I wonder if you could extend your calculator to allow inputting of oil as a choice? Many people who want solar are comparing to oil, rather than gas because we live to far from gas mains.
@GaryDoesSolar4 ай бұрын
Great to hear the video was useful to you! Now, I understand others have used the utility for oil instead of gas - they just had to calculate the numbers a little...
@angelafoot67752 жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation, when doing the investigation on my Eddie system I found that our water tank was losing 71w per hour. This did make a big difference with only a couple in the house and low export payback. System well worth using.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Angela - glad you enjoyed 😀 and great to hear your diverter is working out 👍🏻
@colingoode37022 жыл бұрын
Good video & content Gary. I'm just about to start on my Solar journey & I have a survey booked for next week & I'm considering a solar diverter. The problem I have is that our gas boiler fed HW cylinder is 38 years old & I bet the internals are covered in limescale. It is a factory foamed cylinder with an addition jacket around it & has a short reach top mounted emersion heater which only heats up approx 30% of the water in the top of the tank. The fact that it is 38 years old I'm wondering if it's worth upgrading it for a better insulated modern tank with a lower side mounted emersion heater? I know this will add substantially to the cost & payback scenario but can't help thinking that the old tank is due for a change & would a be a weak link in my solar system if I keep it.
@CMWobby12 жыл бұрын
My advice for what it’s worth! As a retired heating engineer is absolutely change the Cylinder for one of the new stainless steel fully insulated ones. I’d also advise you go for one with two Emerson heater, one near the bottom and the other near the top. Then you can choose wether to heat al or part of the tank. Your old Cylinder has done well to last so long and leaks can be expensive, as my sister recently found out.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words, Colin :-) And thanks also to C M, who has hopefully helped you decide on what to do.
@colingoode37022 жыл бұрын
@@CMWobby1 Thanks for that. Decision made, I'm going to change it. Just hope I can get one which has similar connection positions to the old 36 x 18 to avoid too many pipework changes.
@maverlk72 жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, great video! A tiny fly in the ointment is that in running a gas boiler, you are also running a pump (60 to 100 watts depending on size) as well as the boiler fan (30 watts) and associated controls. The pump runs continuously in the on timed periods. I have done some of my own calculations on power use for this, but in winter months, when the heating is on at the same time, these costs would be incurred anyway heating the house.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi John, thanks for kind words on the video And good point - modelling any real world system accurately is hard, but I’ve tried to include enough that people can make informed conclusions. The electric cost of running a gas system required could be calculated as a small percentage on top of the gas cost (maybe < 5%?)
@johnburgess24052 жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, all your videos are great - many thanks. If you have a battery, is it better to use the excess solar to charge it rather than having a diverter?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Most definitely, John - fill your battery first, because that saves you the retail cost of buying that same electricity. Then, with the excess, you have a choice: 1. Divert it to your water tank 2. Export it (if you can achieve a good rate, like the Octopus 15p/kWh) Win, win! Thanks for your kind words on my videos :-)
@robhayward26552 жыл бұрын
One other cost to consider is the boiler start up and heating the water in the pipes. Heating the boiler mass and 60 feet of pipes (counting both ways) may be small, but not insignificant. My oil boiler has only been on for one day since May, when we had a cloudy week, the riveter has saved a lot of oil.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
And with the price of oil these days, you must be pretty chuffed with that 👍🏻
@terryrigden48602 жыл бұрын
Whether diverters are worth it depends on your situation. For us on a FIT contract that assumes we export half of what we generate whether we do or not. We have been using a solar Iboost for many years and have saved over 9Mwh. So our excess solar power really is free. In practice we get free hot water for about 9 months a year and contributes for the other 3. When the sun doesn't heat the tank we use the built in timer to heat using cheap rate electricity which is very similar to gas.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
HiTerry, being on a FiT contract certainly helps a lot with regard to payback on a solar diverter. 9MWh is a lot of energy - well done! It might take me a few years to get to that point :-)
@AwestruckChemicals7 ай бұрын
Might be a stupid question but @7:50 timestamp, isn't the energy required to heat that one litre just a kW value? Wouldn't you need a timeframe for it to become kWhr value?
@GaryDoesSolar7 ай бұрын
I can understand your question, and it's purely down to the difference between power and energy. When you switch the immersion heater on it will start heating the water. That means the immersion heater is instantly consuming power... but in the first few seconds, the water temperature doesn't change. It's only after a finite time at that level of power that the water starts to heat up. And when it has risen by 1 degree, you multiply the power by the time taken to get the energy requirement (which is in kWh).
@80from802 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the videos Gary. Most helpful I’ve come across by far. If I didn’t have a diverter, and I switched the immersion on while the PV panels were generating, wouldn’t the PV panels directly power the immersion? Or if I timed the immersion to come on during the day, a well insulated tank would act as a battery?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jamie - that’s very kind of you to say! 😀 Yes, you’re right about manual or timed immersion heater control - that’s essentially what the diverter does for you automatically. But the advantage the diverter has is that it can vary the power to the immersion (rather than just all or nothing). That’s important because if you have clouds coming over for a few minutes (as is typical in many countries) it will automatically reduce the power in order not to draw from the grid. A timer solution would not know about the clouds, and I doubt you’d want to be watching the sky all day with your finger on the switch 🤣 Hope that helps 👍🏻
@Plan3tBob Жыл бұрын
If you ignore cost of the water heater: We simply end up comparing the ratio of the cost of gas to the revenue you can get for your solar. On todays gas prices of 7p per kWh: If I can sell my excess electric at 9p or more then it's cheaper to use gas and sell the excess electric. Given Octopus paying me 15p to 20p for my excess solar... I certainly regret purchasing the Eddi, in fact I have it always off now. (Unless I misunderstood something important!)
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Yeah, EDDIs (and other solar diverter products) are currently not useful to most people. If export prices come down again, that could change of course.
@stuartburns86572 жыл бұрын
Another cracking video Gary. The costing didn't seem to capture the price of having an emersion tank brought and fitted, unless that was part of the £100 installation? I think for those on FIT payments, it's a hard sell break even wise. A friend gets around 1k pa, and gets not on the most lucrative FIT scheme. For us SEG peasants, I'll be lucky to make £100+ pa with a 6k system lol. Food for thought certainly
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks very much, Stuart :-) Yeah, I took the view that most homes (in the UK anyway) that have water tanks, already have immersion heaters fitted. Maybe that's not the case? But yes, if a tank has to be purchased, then that cost should be added to the diverter cost. True, those on FiT payments, seemed to have won the lottery :-)
@ianthomas99842 жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, thanks for the excellent channel. For those of us with no gas supply and using oil for water heating, is it easy to adapt your economic evaluation to represent the situation with an oil alternative to gas?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
You're very welcome, Ian - thanks for taking the time to watch. Now, I would say, yes it should be easy to substitute oil instead of gas. You'll need to get some handle on the efficiency of heating water with oil though... Good luck!
@ryanmason491 Жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, do you know if there are any easy ways to do this with a combi boiler? It obviously doesnt store water but do you know of any methods to store water/retro fit to benefit from over solar generation?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Ryan, so with the combi-boiler, it’s only consuming electricity when the hot water is being drawn, which is usually just a minute or so typically on occasion (and slightly longer if taking a shower or filling a bath). Excess solar has a very different profile, perhaps several hours during the middle part of the day. There’s no way to toes the two, unless there is a bigger - namely a water cylinder. Worth watching my follow-up video here (kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKvGYppnl99jm6M) as if you’re looking to make a financial return, given the excellent export rates available on many tariffs at the moment, it actually doesn’t make sense to divert. But if you really want to make use of your excess solar to heat water, then a cylinder is the way to go, assuming your property can house such.
@williamcurran61902 жыл бұрын
This diverter idea looks perfect for my plug-in Ioniq plus my new water heater. Having to fart about plugging in and out when the sun shines/doesn't is a bit of a bind. Not too sunny in Denmark. Thankyou Sir - I am now a subscriber.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for subscribing, William 😀 Great to see my videos getting further reach. Hopefully Denmark will get more sun soon! 👍🏻
@boomerang2 Жыл бұрын
great channel Gary, discovered via google on a search for PV / combi / HW tank results My question to you / anyone reading I don't have PV yet but assuming some major renovation works go ahead, i would dispose of my aging traditional boiler, and an accompanying solar thermal solution / oversized pressurised tank, and go PV fully across my south facing roof (approx 60sqm) I like the idea of a combi boiler and going tank-less (a bit more space, but also a simpler and lower install cost solution). Except that, now you have enlightened me on solar diverters, they seem a great idea to mop up excess (outside of home / EV car use). What i can't reach a conclusion on, is whether it would be 'better' to do without the additional cost complexity of a pressurised tank and diverter, and instead it an electric heated shower in one of bathrooms. I.e. if the sun is out and a shower is needed - then 'free' hot water. If no sun, then fairly efficient hot water from the combi. I am not considering use of batteries in the above. Your thoughts? My question is not about which is better for the planet, more, which is better for my pocket..
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to watch my videos and also to comment :-) Now, unfortunately, l'm not really in a position to provide individual advice, (not least because of potential liability issues - even if that advice is given free, such is the world today). You're best to speak to an installer about that, or post a comment onto a solar forum (e.g. this one in the UK: facebook.com/groups/2197329430289466) Good luck with whatever you decide!
@berthaduniverse2 жыл бұрын
Gary, new viewer, happy discovery via the YT Algo. We have had a 12kw solar system for about 5 years, and as a retired GC I tried to do a lot of my own homework before our system purchase and installation (SunPower). We are in Southern California so solar here is a no-brainer, but could you do something on how people in the UK (or other often cloudy areas) can figure out their ROI for solar. BTW: Since retirement I have done a couple small, RV based "off-grid" systems, and I can say, I have already leared a fair amount from your videos. Thanks so much.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paul - great to hear you’re enjoying my videos 😀 Regarding ROI, did you see my video on that very topic? Here is the link: m.kzbin.info/www/bejne/fKfNpn2Hj7elrKM
@berthaduniverse2 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar no, I think I have some mining to do. Thanks for the link...
@CMWobby12 жыл бұрын
All these calculations are based on a lot of if’s! However in my view a solar diverter is always worth having, for the simple reason that one’s reducing the amount of gas, a fossil fuel one using. My solar diverter both heats the water and it’s second circuit heats our towel rails. As we installed solar when FIT payments were available using all our solar doesn’t effect our FIT payment, It’s a win win. We use a myenergi Eddi diverter.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
I'm afraid that's the name of the game with real word modelling - hence why there are so many fields that can be adjusted to suit everyone's particular circumstance. It can never be perfect - it only has to be good enough for people to get a reasonable idea on the value of a diverter to them. Great news that your diverter is working out for you, and yes, win, win because of the FiT payments! :-) Eddi does seem to be the best in the market, by far.
@craigchamberlain2 жыл бұрын
Really interesting video Gary. I’m just starting my renewables journey with an ESS system hopefully being installed in the coming weeks followed by solar PV as soon as I can get hold of some decent panels. After watching your video, I’m in no hurry to install a solar diverter! Thanks.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Craig, are you able to say a little more about your ESS system? Sounds intriguing. Is it a flywheel or compressed gas or something? 😳 And whatever it is, is it not quite expensive…? Sorry, this is not an area I’ve looked at.
@craigchamberlain2 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Hi Gary, it's just a lithium (LiFePo4) battery system, nothing more elaborate than that. The system I'm looking at is from Victron Energy who make the Multiplus-II inverter/charger, and Pylontech who make the battery modules. Victron have a range of inverters but the one I'm looking at can deliver 5000VA (about 4.4kW) and can also operate in the event of a grid power outage. It's basically the same system as in the KZbin channel "The EV Puzzle" Hope this helps and sorry if this answer is a bit more boring than you were hoping for. 😂
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Craig, I'm very familiar with Nigel's setup on The EV Puzzle - I watch all his videos 🙂Ok, if your setup is similar to that, then you can't really go wrong! I was seriously considering Pylontech batteries but in the end I've gone for a GivEnergy system as it should be able to link to Octopus Energy smart tariffs. We'll see how it all goes when I eventually get my install (planned for Dec/Jan).
@markboscawen83302 жыл бұрын
Great explanation. Another consideration is maintenance costs. When the excess solar output is less the power rating of the HWS element, most solar diverter units momentarily store & build up the energy until there is sufficient available to power the element for several seconds or so. This on-off cycling of the element can substantially shorten the element’s operating life. Hence the increased maintenance costs of more frequent element replacement. Also, when in this pulsing mode it is not very efficient because the very first part of every energy pulse is wasted in bringing the element back up to a temp which can then heat the water.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Mark, thanks for pointing out. I didn’t know that. I guess immersions were never designed for such erratic behaviour…
@markboscawen83302 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Don’t know if you’ve already covered it, but may I suggest another way to minimise exported power is to use the load switching functions available in some solar inverters. Eg Fronius to mention 1 brand name. When the optional smart meter & data comms card are installed, these inverters can be programmed to switch a contactor/relay when certain solar production, consumption & export conditions are met. I have mine controlling a pool pump but the operating principle would be the same for hot water. The inverter only turns on the pump when more than 1,100 watts is being exported. The pump is rated at 1,000 watts so the 100 w buffer makes sure turning the pump on won’t then draw some off the grid. To avoid cycling off/on due to a passing cloud the pump is programmed to keep operating for 10 mins if the solar output drops & grid draw occurs. If after this time the solar still isn’t producing enough to run the pump without grid draw then pump remains off until there is again. This could be from full sun returning or other loads within the house reducing. The only thing the inverter looks for is more than 1,100 watts being exported. Should it be an overcast/rainy day with insufficient output to trigger the start of the pump, the inverter is programmed to run it for 3 hours from 1am on cheaper overnight rates. So a hot water system could be turned on the same way to ensure hot water for that morning shower. If the water reaches temp before the set hours are up the thermostat turns it off. So, before going off and buying an independent device, I urge your followers to investigate if they already have the technology required in extant equipment to achieve a similar outcome. This of course would substantially reduce the capital cost & so dramatically reduce the payback period.
@Kwirks2 жыл бұрын
I have the Solar IBoost, I had it installed around May this year at a total cost of £430, as the thermostat had failed that controlled the emersion heater. I checked yesterday & you can do this at anytime how much it has saved for the day, the last 24hrs, the last week & since it was installed. So far it's saved me over 600Kwh that would have been gas heated. Since it was installed, I have only had the boiler on twice to help heat up the water for a bath. I get no payback from my panels as they were installed for free, the company get the payback. Well worth it for me as it's also environmentally better too.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
That's just brilliant, Paul :-)
@Kwirks2 жыл бұрын
@@Bondy1986 I don't have a battery, the sender unit goes direct to the feed in at the meter so it can see when I'm sending power to the grid. The IBoost sits where the switch was for the emersion heater & tells it how much it can put in the element from around 10 watts up to around 3kw. I didn't get the IBoost buddy as they are in short supply but I'm coping without it. I wish I done it 7yrs ago when I had the solar panels put up.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
There are many benefits of a DC battery over an AC one, so it’s worth making a total assessment. For example, DC batteries are more efficient on the AC/DC conversions, and if you have an oversized array, your inverter can store the generation above its rated limit into the battery.
@tampayne6080 Жыл бұрын
Interesting calculator. But if you have a heat pump with a COP of say 3, this alters the electricity input on days with insufficient solar dramatically. As an aside, should I be using 3 times more free electricity, or just using my heat pump to do the job, and exporting to the grid?!
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Tam, thanks for taking the time to comment. Now, the calculator is really for gas (or fossil fuel) boilers. I haven't looked into heat pumps yet, but maybe someone else here could comment on that?
@robbiegerard78572 жыл бұрын
I have purchased a second hand unvented cylinder which will have a DC element wired directly to some pv panels this will be a pre heat source to the main cylinder inlet, therefore reducing any waste of pv power.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Robbie, I didn’t realise there were DC-powered cylinder heaters available. Sounds like a great solution! 😀
@robbiegerard78572 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar they are more common to the American market as they are used in off grid situations, Amazon is the best place to source. DC elements are more difficult to use when it comes to switching them on and off via a thermostat as the current is not alternating (AC) but using a relay could be the answer (I'm still researching) we require hot water every day so to pre heat via pv panels with an immersion heater and perhaps a solar water heater/parabolic solar heater/wood burner using the indirect loop of the cylinder would help.
@ianbeck5897 Жыл бұрын
Interesting video, and all of the videos for that matter, thank you Gary, We are on a FIT (with Scottish Power) at 19p/6p rate but have our electricity with Octopus. We have a 4K array but no battery or EV's. It's a large house, old, reasonable insulation, but is oil fired via a boiler driving hydronic under floor heating and hot water through a 300L thermal store (boiler runs on demand 24hrs via a tank stat). No gas locally and electric cooking. The oil has cost us a lot in the past 12 months and I started reconsidering solar diverters again. We average about 12KwH of electric usage per day. Yes, batteries are a great way forward but a costly investment, if you can find them and an installer. I get the idea of an Octopus variable tariff but wonder if dumping the FIT would prove costly for us, even with generous rates on offer from Octopus. I just wonder if a solar diverter is a decent "part way house" for us for now? Trouble is, with a thermal store holding half the tank above 55 degrees, would the incremental temperature increase offered by an immersion heater with a maxed out temperature setting offer a decent pay back period for a solar diverter? Any thoughts or handy calculators or formulae would be most welcome! Thanks
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Ian, thanks for the kind feedback on this and other my videos. You may have seen my follow-up solar diverter video where I feel the financial case for one is no longer there in light of the higher export rates we're seeing at the moment: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKvGYppnl99jm6M The fact you're on on FiT though means that it's still worth it for you - I would certainly hold onto that tariff for as long as you can! :-) I've not seen any calculators unfortunately. If I do, I'll certainly let you know!
@ianbeck5897 Жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Thank you for the reply Gary. Indeed my FIT rate does seem a lot more attractive than the rates on offer recently and this is what made me wonder if there is any logic in moving to one of the new Octopus schemes. In addition, we're on a simple PV generation meter so are not paid for what we export, simply what we generate plus a notional amount for perceived export. It seems like, if we stay where we are, we could do worse than buy a PV dump system and also add a battery at a more suitable time, all the while keeping the FIT rate that we currently enjoy. Sadly though, at our old house things were even better as our FIT rate was 44.1p! - one of the few downsides of escaping from the city and moving to the countryside is loosing the early adoption FIT rate that we had.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
@@ianbeck5897 Well, I'd certainly welcome the countryside over the city having worked in the latter for many years 🙂
@davidrich3914 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video which has convinced me that, in my circumstances, a diverter is not a sensible option. One point with the calculator though. It assumes that the water is being heated from scratch every day. With my very well insulated tank the water is still hot the next day, even after I have used some for a shower, so does not have to be heated from the average temp. In larger households where all the water is being used then it would work out ok..
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi David, glad you liked the video, Now, actually, my assumption in the utility is that any unused water in the tank stays hot! The utility purely concerns itself with the flow of water through the tank and the energy required to support that flow. Hope that explains...
@alanjrobertson2 жыл бұрын
Interesting calculator, thanks. 7.5p per kWh of electricity seems a bit cheap though given current price cap rates, unless you're able to only do it overnight on time of use tariff?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Alan, yes it is just an example off peak rate (UK Octopus Go - 00:30 till 04:30) 👍🏻
@geraintroberts8415 Жыл бұрын
Hi. Thanks for the video. In the calculation, regarding the export value that needs to be considered. It says that the higher the rate the less feasible a diverter is. If we get paid for power generated whether we use it or not, we still get paid the full amount do we need to put zero in this box?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Ah, now you might be on a FiT scheme. This utility wasn’t designed for that unfortunately. I would enter “0” as you say, and see what the utility says.
@synthwave7 Жыл бұрын
Gary - Just want to mention - Sunsynk Solar systems can also do this what the EDDI does somewhat. You set the menu to export power via the AUX port to drive the immersion heater. Surplus energy from the solar panels are used to charge the batteries while power is sent to the immersion heater. The export kick in percentage can easily be adjusted based on battery SOC, to send power to the immersion heater. Cost for this was a RCB Contatcor, some twin and earth cable, a MCB - let's say a couple of pounds. The solar diverters are just more variable. But many of us do not have our water heaters [geysers] on Solar - it is on grid and just nees top up during the day and the solar supply feeding it, then saves money as this topup power in the daytime comes from solar not grid.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this info - and the more I hear about Sunsynk, the more I'm liking their products! :-)
@АлександърМадов Жыл бұрын
Dear friend, let's say I have a 3kw water heater. In case my PV generates 2kw, for example, and the battery is 100% charged, would the AUX port use the 2kw available from the PV to power the heater and the last 1 kw from the battery or from the grid? The thing is that export is not allowed in my country so I am looking for a way to fully utilize the PV generation. This prevents me from using a power diverter, from what I understand. However, I am not sure whether it is a good idea to use the battery for heating the water (it seems wasteful, I do not know why :D). In other words, can the AUX port work like a diverter meaning it would ONLY use the excess solar, or it would supplement the 2kw PV power with battery/grid? Thanks!
@andygolub174 Жыл бұрын
Like your analyses most informative. I have a recently installed Air Source Heat Pump, using a kilowatt-hour can generate 2-3.5 kilowatt-hours worth of hot water with any spare solar. There's also the Octopus "Cosy" tariff for ASHP combined with battery I am able to use solar and off peak power to cover most of my energy usage. Charge 10 kilowatt-hours 4-7 am sunrise produces a mix until next off peak 1.00-4.00pm.which takes my batteries to full this is then used through to the evening. Leaving only a few hours at night at standard rates. This seems to me the most carbon neutral and cheapest way of using your energy production. Don't yet know how my ROI will stack up. With current UK govt grants it's a no brainer. A Cosy tariff spread sheet would be a useful tool.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Andy, thanks for the great feedback! :-) Yeah - the cosy tariff looks interesting. Worth you checking out Tim & Kat's channel here, which covers the cosy tariff in detail: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bZWal3huq7efatU
@asteel15 Жыл бұрын
Great video and explanation including the graphics. My issue is that the current export of 15p means payback is difficult. Additionally the tank losses are ~25% per day when full, therefore heating up during the day with solar would still need to boost with gas to have an early morning shower. So for me these are great during the FiT when export was use it or lose it, but now would be better to get paid to export from a pure financial perspective. N.B. not burning gas has a plethora of other benefits.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Alistair, it might be worth you looking at a new tank - I changed mine recently and now only have losses of circa 2-3% a day. I think you'll be interested in this follow-up video I made then, which covers the increasing export rates in more detail: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKvGYppnl99jm6M
@Umski2 жыл бұрын
A diverter was one of my first 'projects' on my PV - using the EmonTX from Open Energy Monitor and some open source code from a very smart contributor (total cost
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Sounds like you have a great setup there 👍🏻
@Hevva678 ай бұрын
I am on my own in a little 2 bed cottage, I would love a solar way of heating hot water, would it be better to get solar water heaters, or to heat with a diverter and solar panels? I don’t want to use such a system with a boiler, just want an electric immersion heater, (can’t get piped Gas in my area, and I’m fed up with my oil boiler system too). I just want my hot water heated by the sun or electricity. I have two open fires for heat and I’d rather have electric heaters….. Anyway.
@GaryDoesSolar8 ай бұрын
Assuming you live in the UK, there's not enough sun to ensure hot water all year round, unfortunately. So even if you did add solar, you'd still need another method to heat water when there is no sun. Worth looking at heat-pump based water heating. Take a look at Tim & Kat's Green Walk channel for some ideas... Good luck!
@mikejoseph425 Жыл бұрын
Great video, a lot for my brain to take in. I have a SunSynk Hybrid inverter which has auxiliary connections that can be set to heat an immersion, not totally sure how it works but I think the only difference between the auxiliary and essential supply is that auxiliary only pulls from battery or solar, not grid and I do think, it works irrespective of the house and battery being satisfied, it is all the time except 00.30 and 04.30 (when no solar and battery charging from off peak). I do not think it has the facility to supply less than 3kw so it seems a very broad brush approach, all or nothing. After some thought I controlled the cable feeding the immersion via a Timeguard Wi-Fi controlled fused spur model FSTWIFITU which allows me to time control the immersion and works very well as I can remotely switch on and off. Before my solar/battery installation I never used the immersion, so not surprisingly I did not factor in the 4/5 kWh a day to heat the water, which is fine off of the solar and battery during the summer but I figure I might have to revert to my boiler during the low solar months to avoid draining 25% of my battery on water heating. I am not too upset as the auxiliary is part of the package and the Timeguard cost less than £50 I would be delighted if someone would confirm my observations of exactly how the SunSynk auxiliary works and you are the man to do it
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Mike, thanks - I also made a follow up to that video here, in case you did not already see: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bKvGYppnl99jm6M Thanks for taking the time to describe your solar setup and situation. I don't have any expertise on Sunsynk products, but hopefully, someone reading this can help answer your questions. Failing that, I'd suggest you join this Facebook group and ask there: facebook.com/groups/2197329430289466 Good luck!
@isolver_es5025 Жыл бұрын
Hi Gary. What about Air Source Heat Pump powered by solar? I understand that every kWh of solar used in an ASHP is over 3 times more efficient than pulling from the grid. Could that scenario be included in your calculator? Cheers
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Working on a heat pump video shortly... :-)
@lyracian2 жыл бұрын
Thank you that is very interesting. I have never really thought about it in terms of what the gas would cost if I were to burn it and sell the generated electricity. The fact that I would get more cash, albeit pennies, was not something that had occurred to me. I am still going to charge with solar as it gets us one step closer to net zero. I hope to ditch the gas completely in a couple of years.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
You’re welcome! And yes, I think we can all do our bit to reduce our dependency on fossil fuels 👍🏻 Good luck with your solar journey!
@victaflyer2 жыл бұрын
I am using a Sonoff switch with Home Assistant (HA) to turn on the immersion heater. HA can estimate solar and turn on during peak times. When I am not generating enough via solar, the battery makes up the shortfall and switches off. If I start drawing from the grid, it switches off.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
That sounds like an elegant solution - love it! :-)
@simongeorge703 Жыл бұрын
Hi Gary Quick question. Have a solaredge system with two energy banks. Trying to decide whether to wait and get the solaredge hot water smart energy unit as in back order or go with Eddi my myenergi. Any suggestions? Given the dc coupled nature of the batteries in a little concerned the Eddi won’t “see” enough of the system to offer maximum efficiency. Thoughts?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Simon, whilst I cannot provide you advice, I certainly think there is tremendous benefit with any system that has tight integration wrt data ("seeing" as you put it). If it were me, and I had a system similar to yours, and I wanted to add a solar diverter, I'd most certainly go for the SolarEdge version, even if it cost a little more.
@simongeorge703 Жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Thanks Gary - Yes i got to the same decision after a little more research. Great channel and coverage of the subject.
@henrivanbemmel11 ай бұрын
Gary, that is of course one if the concerns. We spend all the money to build a system of one type or another with a payback period of perhaps less than 10 years. However, after that policies and/or prices change and the consumer is often disadvantaged. It feels like the solar contracting/gov't policy in this area is still the 'wild west' and gives me pause due to the volatility.
@GaryDoesSolar11 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's not easy to figure out the payback for any system investment in a sea of constant changes (energy prices and policies etc.) Prices are falling over time, so waiting for a little less volatility is no bad thing...
@adriaan76272 жыл бұрын
Wauw, this is wonderful (and new) information for me. Nicely done.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Adrian! Hope it’s useful to you 👍🏻😀
@mahon2572 жыл бұрын
I have an eddi, highly recommended. my gas boiler no longer used for hot water ever.. octopus go used to charge battery and heat hw, 00.30 to 04.30. solar does the rest of the hw heating during daytime via eddi. occasionally use battery to heat hw in evening. with current gas prices... absolute life saver.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Great to see you've managed to cut down your gas usage, Nick :-)
@alexanderSydneyOzАй бұрын
Thanks for the great video but how on earth could a shower use 18 l of water per minute? That will be one litre every 3 seconds. Not sure how other people's showers work but mine does definitely not flow anything near that
@GaryDoesSolarАй бұрын
Haha - good point - that would be a drowning!
@offgridwanabe2 жыл бұрын
Great video always temper your expectations with a 50 % fail rate as Murphy's law is prominent, for instance I live in Ontario Canada 6 years ago I installed solar with a 7 year pay back calculated but to my surprise in the 3rd year the government decided to rewrite the Ontario credit for electricity which is great I love getting a credit but it changed my pay back period to 10 years. But do not worry 3 years after they increased the prices so I am now back on track to a 7 year pay back which is next year. Also I find some sun year hours are much better than others which may be the rain/snow events seem to be longer. Oh I have a 100% electric home so I use 17,000 kwh a year so when I reach my pay back I will be up grading Solar is the future of my energy.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks :-) Yeah, and this is the problem with any long-term investment. Nobody can predict the future (at least, I've not met anyone yet who can). And in today's world it seems that anything is possible - things that reduce your payback period, and things that lengthen it! I totally agree, residential solar will be the future for most people's home energy :-)
@ManChickin7 ай бұрын
am i right in saying underfloor heating will decease the payback period even more? i have a conventional boiler
@GaryDoesSolar7 ай бұрын
It's difficult to give an answer on that as there are so many factors I'm afraid. The best way is to speak to an installer for advice.
@davesaxon734810 ай бұрын
Hi, if we have 2 people in a new efficient bungalow with a heat pump. Would a solar diverter be a good option? Thinking of not having gas to save standing charge. Thanks
@GaryDoesSolar10 ай бұрын
Hi Dave, I'm assuming your heat pump is air-to-air then? I highly recommend you watch the heat pump videos on Tim & Kat's Green Walk channel, as they have done just that! Start with this one: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fZSzYaZjlpeFjNU
@MrKlawUK Жыл бұрын
does an Eddi require a zappi or is it standalone? Seems to me if you already have a zappi which can monitor and calculate excess to control a charger - then the Eddi doesn't need any of that logic - it could be a fairly basic relay controlled by the zappi. This would also keep costs down. Seems like you're almost buying two similarly complex items when you don't need to
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
The Eddi can be used standalone to the Zappi in fact. What makes the Eddi different to the Zappi is that the Eddi has special circuitry to curtail power to the water heater (or other resistive device) according to the level of excess solar.
@andrewjudge4888 Жыл бұрын
We recently moved to a relatively new house and had solar Pv panels, batteries and diverted, Eddi and Zappi. It also had a hot water cylinder which was one of our must haves, however, coming from over 35 years of combi boilers we were surprised to find that we had a thermal store cylinder, so excess solar production also assists in reducing energy required to heat the house, how does that affect your payback calculations?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Andrew, what is a thermal store cylinder? I've not heard of that before... is it like an immersion heater?
@andrewjudge4888 Жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Yes, it looks very much like a conventional hot water cylinder but is actually very different, the water in the cylinder is the boiler system water, the hot water to the taps is heated in a plate heat exchanger that sits within the cylinder, so when I have excess solar generation and the immersion heating element is active it reduces the load on the boiler.
@engineer171512 жыл бұрын
Great video Gary ... how does the thesis work for diverters if you scrap all ideas of getting paid for solar excess ... and could it run a central heating system typical 4 bedroom house using solar batteries charged during fine daytime hours (in winter). The mind is now boggling!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Rog, great to hear you liked my video! 😀 ok, heating then… Heating with electricity takes a lot of energy and you’d quickly find that a battery (even say a 10kWh one) would only be able to heat water for central heating for an hour or two at most (consider that a gas boiler operates at around 20-30kW) when warming up radiators. Having said that, there is a solution - a heat pump! It’s not for everyone (yet) but they’re a far more efficient way of heating. I’m planning a video on this soon, which explains everything 👍🏻
@bengardener89282 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar The only reason to use solar to heat water is when you're producing excess solar power (IE batteries charged and using less than is being produced), during winter you should be using a fire with back boiler to heat the water if can't use gas/ don't want to constantly get oil. You should think of the water tank as a short term battery that stores energy in the form of heat that can be used when the sun is set. The cost to store solar energy in water for use later is not much per kwh heat stored.
@stuartburns86572 жыл бұрын
Didnt know Octopus had raised export prices to 15p. Nice one 👍 Only bummer "Currently, you can't be on both outgoingOctopus and OctopusGo, our EV tariff, at the same time"
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it's only for certain tariffs (I've now added a note to the video description, in case of confusion). But see my pinned comment, where I comment on why higher export rates should eventually appear on all tariffs...
@maverlk72 жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, great video! A tiny fly in the ointment is that in running a gas boiler, you are also running a pump (60 to 100 watts depending on size) as well as the boiler fan (30 watts) and associated controls. The pump runs continuously in the on timed periods. I have done some of my own calculations on power use for this, but in winter months, when the heating is on at the same time, these costs would be incurred anyway heating the house.
@stuartburns86572 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar The cynic in me things they'll only go to Octupus's previous of 7.5p max, but love to be proved wrong. I think you can use anybody for SEG, so I'll stick to the Go tariff until March, then I'll have seen my 1st worse case generation period. Maybe then which to the better export rate for 6-8 month then back on Go. You still waiting for DNO sign off?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm with SSEN and I'm told that it's 4-5 months these days for G99 sign off! Madness! Let's see what happens...
@dragontreetv Жыл бұрын
I've noticed that unlike solar panel manufacturers, that typically provide 20 plus years of warranty and inverter manufacturers who provide 5 - 10 years, these diverter manufacturers typically offer just 1-2 years of warranty. I've also read many reviews that suggest that this reflects how long many of them last. So even if payback is 2 years, there is often no benefit it would seem and there is the carbon cost of manufacturing and disposing of the unit.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Chris, I agree - and it seems that the electronics required to manipulate AC waveforms just don't last forever...
@chrishosking68422 жыл бұрын
Great video, would it be possible to add to your Solar Diverter Calculator the ability for other currencies, like AUD please?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
I’ll look into this Chris, but for the moment you can just enter currency values in your chosen currency (e.g. just read £0.08 = AUS$0.08)
@frankjohn1408 Жыл бұрын
Hi Gary, should there not be a protection loop in the system; to stop the water getting too hot, a limit stat in the cylinder to cut off the feed to the element! Safety first
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Frank, yes, the diverter still makes use of the thermostat built-in to the immersion heater, which automatically cuts the power when the correct water temperature is reached. I believe some inverters also monitor the water temperature separately to that.
@toto296202 жыл бұрын
I have modified my boiler to reduce it’s power and I turn it on from 11am to 4pm with a clock driving the contractor in my electrical panel. It cost way less than a diverted and get a close enough result.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Nice one! 👍🏻
@evil172 жыл бұрын
Yes, i have done a similar thing, but still looking for some tweaks to activate the Hot Water system when there is good sun & a timer for minimal inputs when it is cloudy.
@mickdownes92652 жыл бұрын
Really interesting video. I've got a combi boiler and lost my immersion tank when this was installed. I would have to look at getting one installed again , if possible, and adjust the installation cost to cover this. One of the benefits of the combi is getting hot water at near mains pressure, thus the immersion tank would have to be a pressurized one to keep this benefit. I've got a few questions now for my heating engineer!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Mick - our hot water cylinder is unvented, which means we get near-mains pressure too (fab!) Yeah, your heating engineer will advise better than I can. Good luck in whatever you decide!
@johndean16342 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar When you look back in time the Victorians was cleaver. So adopted there ideas some what. And went for Solid Fuel Central Heating in the 80s. Price was almost double of Gas central heating at that time. But over the years we saved loads. And all you need is a Vented Indirect Cylinder which is a few hundred Quid depending on size you need. So I get Hot Water from my log burner during winter time easy. Solar would just help with Hot water in the period when Log burner would melt you. And ultimately with an Air Source Heat Pump for those days when its just chilly run off solar. No Gas since the 80s Sid was not a Happy Bunny. Now Solar would eliminate 80% of Electric if I plan it right. Logs cost me 450 quid and being old fart it reduces to Zero this year with winter fuel allowance. Get the wife a flat iron and a kettle for the log burner winner lmao.
@johndean16342 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Foot note. Tried China for Panels by the way. Not cost effective unless you buy 100 or more then you would save a considerable amount. Batteries are cheaper and costs 250 quid for shipping. If and when I find decent recommended Company will post them here. They do offer a Trial Period on some before you pay full amount and free returns if there are problems.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Love it, John! And I'm old enough to remember Sid as well 🙂
@deang56222 жыл бұрын
You can get, and I have it, an electric immersion heater which holds hot water at mains pressure. The shower is the best shower I have ever had. It's very powerful and it's hot. Flow rate is excellent. That same tank feeds the hot water taps in the property.
@jeffgraham6387 Жыл бұрын
To be fair when I'm making excess solar I just switch on the immersion...after 30 mins or so the thermostat switches off and we've enough hot water to last us...2 adults....no payback period as no outlay!
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Hi Jeff, this sounds like a very pragmatic solution!
@richclean2 жыл бұрын
finally…I’m beginning to understand 🤔 what about evac tubes for hot water? Have you a video on that?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Ric - glad to have helped in your understanding of solar. Now Solar thermal (via evacuation tubes) is certainly a way forward if all you want to do is save money by heating water using the sun directly. But therein lies the drawback: these panels are designed only for that single use. Solar PV, on the other hand, can be used for a whole variety of uses (general home energy supply, EVs, water heating,..) So what we're really looking at here is opportunity cost for the roof space required to host panels (whether that be thermal or PV). I think many people would prefer to invest in technologies that solve many use cases, not just one. Not least, because with the right tariff, you can easily earn more with solar PV than you could ever save with solar thermal.
@richclean2 жыл бұрын
can evacuation tubes heat water for heating? Obviously only during the day but, I have some customers who have two sets of evac tubes & they say daylight alone gives them very hot water.
@izzzzzz62 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Saving money is not the only reason to go green. I am installing 6kw of amorphous silicone and also 1kw of mono crystalline plus 4 vacuum tube water preheating panels. Practically everything bought at auction or used. Next step is to get huge batteries so i can avoid the subscription, taxes and maintenance fees in France.I would rather spend €20 a month on fuel than be connected at those rates. Shame they don't really want to buy it back as i will have excess at times. I also have a small gas water heater a pellet stove and a small wood stove in-case it hits -20. Pellet stove and wood stove were free, paid £420 for the vacuum tube system with pump expansion tubes and heat exchanger immersion tank plus controller. Bought my grid tie inverters used, the panels were made in Switzerland but the company went bust and the mono / polly panels i have are all used also.
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
I'm quite impressed with how you've built up your setup in a highly cost-efficient way! :-) Agreed, individually, we can and should and all make an effort to reduce our carbon footprint, however small. Even taking steps to further insulate properties has a direct effect. I wish you all the best in your continued journey.
@Joe-lb8qn2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. As a single person when getting quotes it seemed intuitive to me that the payback period would be very long just because of the small amount of hot water i use especially given much of it is in the winter when obviously solar input is minimal.
@mattbastable19422 жыл бұрын
Especially true if your HW is on demand from a modern efficient boiler
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi joe - thanks got watching! Yeah, the more I look at it, the more I see that the situations where a diverter is worth it financially are few.
@bighappyhotgood2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video as ever! I will start to renovate a delapidated 250+ yr old stone cottage next year and have free reign on all systems that will be installed. What do you think about heating water using a heat pump hot water cylinder with off peak electricity and spare solar when available? Heating will most likely be handled by infra red panels and potentially a wood burner too. This video has made me seriously question whether I need a solar diverter as I live alone.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paul - glad you're liking the videos :-) Wow - much be great having the opportunity to start from a green-field-approach! Now, unfortunately, I'm not up to speed on heat pumps yet, but hopefully someone else will be able to comment...
@bighappyhotgood2 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Yes, it's a great opportunity but also daunting! Internal insulation, breathable plasters/clays, a miriad choice of heating methods... but a good opportunity nonetheless. :D
@asilver28892 жыл бұрын
Paul - Recommend you invest in Pete Ward new book The Warm Dry Home: It won't answer your heating dilemma directly, but does give valuable advice on balancing the insulation v ventilation and keeping damp at bay in older and solid wall properties. Start right! My own recommendation is to live in the property for a winter before deciding what to invest in. If you can bear it! Beware of shiny eco-bling, at least as first choice. Use your old walls wisely.
@asilver28892 жыл бұрын
Paul - as you mention IR panels and maybe a stove, presume no gas. I'm in old stone barn, using only electric, some IR, some oil-fill radiators. Had stove fitted in April so not tried for real yet. Bought IR panels one at a time to experiment. I found that a low powered 350w one (gifted) was hopeless as a heater as such, but now use it in kitchen to keep fabric from cooling too much overnight. The trick is to keep walls warm (at least 12 Deg) with low constant heat, not on & off like with gas boiler on timer. I chose stove over heat pump with full wet system, fraction of price and faff. UFH is a big attraction though. Take time to decide. Read Pete Ward book first!
@bighappyhotgood2 жыл бұрын
@@asilver2889 I'll look it up, thanks. I have lived here a year, now- the cottages are an extension of the former pub I bought. I'm parting off the cottages to live full time in.
@TheGreatestLewis7 ай бұрын
Thank you for the calculator
@GaryDoesSolar7 ай бұрын
My pleasure - hope it’s useful to you 👍🏻
@nobotshere83642 жыл бұрын
I've got a diverter and from my experience if your smart with encouraging baths during the day then you can save significant sums of money. Our cost was £400 and installed and it's paid back £40 at current KW prices in just 5 months.
@Swwils2 жыл бұрын
Electric export prices are more than import gas prices. So it makes no sense to divert PV to HW.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Great to hear! It’s worth considering what Swwils said though, if you can achieve a relatively high export price
@deang56222 жыл бұрын
You shouldn't have to change your washing behaviour. You can use batteries to store the energy or just feed power into other appliances or the whole house. It doesn't actually matter what uses the energy: by using the energy from solar, you are reducing how much energy you are taking from the grid. The issue is that you can wire up immersion heaters to cheap rate economy 7 during the night, and good insulation on the water tank will keep that water warm throughout the day, so what you need to do is look at the unit cost (the pence per kilowatt hour) of heating up the water from night time Economy 7 rate electricity and compare that to the equivalent unit cost of the power generated from solar and decide which is the cheapest way to heat the water in the immersion tank. And you should be considering the financial benefit of the feed-in tariff, as mentioned by another poster here and deciding whether it more cost effective to consume that excess solar generated electricity or feed it into the national grid. You can't make assumptions on this, you have to calculate it and use that as the basis of your decisions.
@smikedenney2227 ай бұрын
Hi, is it possible to use an Eddi solar diverter to charge an Anker power station? Thanks Ian
@GaryDoesSolar7 ай бұрын
Good question, and one that I don't know the answer to myself, but perhaps others do...?
@andrewknotsАй бұрын
You missed out the dual immersion scenario common in North America, with 1 at the top of the cylinder, and 1 low down, the top one heats first and only when the top of the cylinder is up to heat does the power get diverted to the lower heater.
@GaryDoesSolarАй бұрын
Thanks Andrew - I was aware but didn’t want the video to be too detailed. Many solar diverters allow for dual immersion operation, certainly 👍🏻
@jimwaugh942 жыл бұрын
Gary another back of the net presentation. For me the worth of a diverter was something I never considered. I thought it was an essential in any system as it was storing excess energy. Having run the utility using multiple options, for me, I realise It would never pay for itself. I now see that in my case, where im contemplating an ASHP, its far more effective in the higher solar producing months to heat the tank using solar / ASHP and then take any dregs that Scottish power deem give me for export. Then put the cost of a diverter down as a deposit on a bigger battery
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words, Jim - you are most welcome! :-) Your proposed strategy looks sound. And in general, I think everyone is finally waking up to ASHP (great). I might look at a video on this at some point. It's a shame that diverters don't really deliver the payback that they appear to provide. If the costs were say half, the story would perhaps be different...
@christurner64302 жыл бұрын
My Immersun diverter tells me how much electricity that has been sent to the immersion heater every day. I use this to calculate the returns at the price per kWhr of gas. I don't use average water consumption per household to work out the return, surely somewhat vague. The Immersun has been installed near enough to 10 years now and has supplied 21,800kWh to my 160 litre hot water tank. I calculated it needed some three years before payback when gas was cheap. Now.....!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Wow - nearly 22 MW 😳 well done! 👍🏻
@formulavon2 жыл бұрын
I’m having a 20 panel system quoted for and have been considering battery, diverter and car charger. With the Octopus Outgoing fixed export of 15p/kWh I now thinking of just going with the panels/inverter. My wife and I both work from home so would run all the power hungry appliances during the day as well as charging an EV during the day. I’m really struggling to justify the battery and diverter, at least from a financial perspective. Even if we exported all the solar energy, about 7000kwh annually, this would pay us over £1000. The more we use the more we would save. Therefore the ROÍ should be well below 10 years. Am I missing something?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Nope - it’s think your analysis is good. The only question is, what will electricity prices be like in 5 years time? I have a feeling they’ll be similar to today (after rising in the meantime once the price guarantee disappears for most people). And battery prices will start to fall by then also… 😀👍🏻
@robinlander11582 жыл бұрын
I suppose there is nothing to stop you switching the immersion heater on manually if you are not using any other appliances
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Robin, that’s true - but it might become tedious after a while. Imagine a sunny day, where clouds disrupt generation every now and again. During those times, the immersion will likely be pulling from the grid.
@simonanartist Жыл бұрын
What about solar panels/batteries linked to an electricity combi boiler? Is this a good option for 3 bedroom home?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to comment. Now, unfortunately, l'm not in a position to provide individual advice (not least because of potential liability issues, even if that advice is given free - such is the world today). You're best to speak to an installer for such advice, or post a comment onto a solar forum (e.g. this one in the UK: facebook.com/groups/2197329430289466). Good luck!
@simonanartist Жыл бұрын
Thank you@@GaryDoesSolar
@chrisjones90892 жыл бұрын
The payback model used in your calculations is in my view a bit flawed! The usual method of heating a tank of hot water is to switch the boiler on once or twice per day. Ours is once per day in the morning before we shower. Irrespective of how much of that hot water we use the remaining hot water in the tank cools over night to get heated up the next day. The amount of gas used is therefore not directly proportional to the number of house occupants. This is quite easily demonstrated if you heat up your hot water but use none for a day. Your boiler will reheat the same tank full the next day. The means the payback period for 1 and 2 house occupants is rather better than you calculate. PS I do like your videos as they are very clear and demystify the technology very well...thanks.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Chris, thanks for the kind words. In making any utility modelling the real world, the more accurate you want it to be, the more exponential the effort. I therefore choose a mainstream use case of a family of 4 who would use the entire tank at least once a day. Even if your case, where hot water remains in the tank, cooling over the remainder of the day - I’d hope your tank would have a high efficiency rating. My own tank will only lose a couple of degrees in 24 hours.
@nicflanagan66622 жыл бұрын
Thanks very much, indeed, another fantastic presentation. A brilliant balance that makes a potentially complex topic understandable. Purely for interest, we live in Dorset with two sizable roofs south and east facing @ 18° pitch. I'm not sure exactly what I'm going to do yet. Because we live out in the bush and use electricity, oil, and log burner, I was thinking of dumping surplus into the electric underfloor heating and water.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your kind words, Nic! 😀
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Your planned strategy sounds like it could work 👍🏻
@Kanabaro2 жыл бұрын
Great video, I’d love to know your thoughts on the system I’m considering for my ‘forever’ home that’s currently being built and whether it seems viable to you : Essentially what you’ve mentioned, a solar diverter to a large water cylinder(500-1000L) which would also service my wet underfloor heating system and aluminium radiators upstairs. Using excess solar to heat my water throughout ‘office’ hours, which I could then use for water and to heat the house when we are home. P.S. 13.68kwh solar array, 25kwh dc coupled battery, 15kwh inverter. I’d be very grateful for a response as it would be a considerable investment and would love some reassurance.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words, Raj 😀 Now, I’m not in a position to give advice to people as this brings about an immediate liability, even in that advice is given free. Your best bet is to speak to an installer. Good luck with the next stage of your journey! 👍🏻
@Makurendende Жыл бұрын
I had the solaredge iboost but within 2 years it broke down three times. I switched to the Solic 200 and it works very well and I have hot water solar powered all the time.
@treescape7 Жыл бұрын
Same here. The Iboost seems pretty feeble and doesn't cope with a bigger tank or higher water temperatures. Just about to replace mine with immersun or eddi. Why did you go for Solic200?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
I'll look into the Solic 200 - sounds like it's working well for you!
@peterurquhart71912 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video Gary .
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
You’re most welcome, Peter 👍🏻
@Raspikabekk Жыл бұрын
Something I can't figure, maybe I missed something or didn't search correctly. If the tank is already in the desired Temperature, will the diverter keep diverting energy into it? Wonder if the diverter will work fine with a Car Charger to get energy surplus, which one will prioritize? Or that's a design solution I have to consider?
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
The immersion heater has its own thermostat, and so it will automatically switch off when temperature has been reached 👍🏻
@74klaw2 жыл бұрын
Gary, this is great...I think I've finally found a place where I may be able to get some help! I've just had (in the last week)10 PV panels installed with a Solis inverter, a Pure Drive DC battery and a Solic 200 solar diverter. What I'm finding is that when the battery is full and there is an excess (lets say 1kwh excess) then the diverter kicks in, BUT...it seems to try and fulfil ALL of the demand of the 3kw immersion by topping up the 1kw excess with 2kw from the battery, essentially draining the battery during the day when I really want to keep the stored energy in the battery for use during the night. I've spoken to Solis and they were not able to help so I'm wondering if its the limitation of the (basic) Solic 200 inverter or is there a change that needs to be made within the immersion control itself? Very much looking forward to some insight on this!
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Kristian, now I'm not too familiar the the Sonic 200 solar diverter, but I'm hoping that others might be able to offer advice here. Generally, what I've learned is that if you set your diverter not to do anything until there is a minimum level of export, that avoids any battery drain.
@74klaw2 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Thanks Gary. I've just spoken to Solic and what they've said is that their diverter has a 'zero export threshold' rather than the 100w minimum that other diverters have. This seems to maximise efficiency but as the threshold is not changeable for the Solic (as it is for other diverters) it means there is the occasional clash between the diverter and the battery. The simple answer is to switch it off during winter where the battery is more valuable and to have it on in the summer when you'll always have enough excess to heat the water and fill the battery. Not the most elegant of solutions!
@SolisNotSolis2 жыл бұрын
@@74klaw Sadly Solic doesn't have a configurable export margin, or time delay. They market this as a "good thing" but in reality they should say "isn't suitable for battery storage systems" and be done with it. As you note, there is a manual solution, but it's not terribly convenient or elegant. The iBoost V2 (note the V2, not the ones on eBay as they're pretty much all V1s being disposed of) and Eddi both are configurable.
@74klaw2 жыл бұрын
@@SolisNotSolis Thats really interesting. So beyond the 'inelegant manual solution', you think the appropriate iBoost or Eddi would allow me to manage more effectively? I'm wondering if I go back to my installer and state that they sold me something that was not fit for purpose?
@SolisNotSolis2 жыл бұрын
@@74klaw We've both installed in various places including an Eddi in my own place. I've a Solis hybrid. Never touch the Eddi. It has a 100w margin, 100w minimum and 10s delay configured. It never eats battery and yesterday heated 7.3kWh of water - the full cylinder. As it does most days - although we have a lot of PV, so obviously what you get out of it is only what's surplus.
@samuelolteanu2 жыл бұрын
A better cheaper but harder way to do it is detecting export power with Home Assistant and controlling appliances with HA automations, especially when having a heat pump witch dedicated diverters can't power.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
True, but most people are not familiar with setting up those kind of technologies. Perhaps a future video… 👍🏻
@The4Crawler2 жыл бұрын
Similar to what I'm doing with a home automation controller and Home Assistant. I detect excess power and then use an AC diversion load to use up that excess: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fmGviIJnfLyBZ9k I have a tankless gas water heater so no tank to dump that excess energy into, so it goes to heating the house on cool days.
@chimeranzl91472 ай бұрын
What about if I don’t use gas, it’s just heated by electricity all the time. I want to either use excess solar to power or use grid if no excess solar. How do I wire that up?
@GaryDoesSolar2 ай бұрын
I think others will have to advise you on that - or speak to the manufacturer of the solar diverter for advice.
@nosh121081 Жыл бұрын
Hi jhon can i use the enegy stored in my battries to heat up the hot water..cheers
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
I'm Gary - yes, you can - but why not just heat water directly from solar or from cheap off-peak import?
@nosh121081 Жыл бұрын
@GaryDoesSolar true...I was just wondering In the night
@aronbraswell15892 жыл бұрын
just got solar this year through solar edge with a grid tied system. wasn't told about a solar diverter option. Not sure if being grid tied if I'd actually need one except at night. what do you think?
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Aron, you don’t need to buy a SolarEdge diverter - you can choose from any manufacturer in fact.
@PG-ji6vq2 жыл бұрын
I have same system with I boost it works very well. The way the FIT works is it makes sense to use as much of your own power generation as possible. Remember you are only paid wholesale generation prices for any power exported, and retail for any power imported. So by using iboost you avoid the cost of importing power from the grid.
@TheTravelTipsGuy2 жыл бұрын
Do you know if the givenergy inverter has a built in solar diverter? EVM mentioned that it does.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
I’ve heard that the new models will have one built-in but don’t have any details unfortunately.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
I’ve heard that the new models will have one built-in but don’t have any details unfortunately.
@73henny2 жыл бұрын
I try and divert excess solar into the car. On good solar days I can turn on the immersion heater even if there is only say 1kw being exported and leverage the extra 2kw from the battery. After the water is up to temp the battery will then recharge. A diverter makes no economic sense to me but the biggest concern is it draining my battery.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, if you have an EV, that seems a much better way to utilise your solar generation :-)
@simon77902 жыл бұрын
We have one and they're great - free hot water for 9 months of the year, and reduced costs for the other 3 months since with a large tank (300L plus), we can wait a couple of days for a good solar day to dump a load of energy in it. You don't always need a fancy brand one with an app and all the cost of supporting the marketing department. They can be very cheap and wire directly into the fuze box. Ours is a RM1B23D50 solid state relay. Saved us hundreds since we got solar panels.
@brianrussell69882 жыл бұрын
What are you using to activate the relay when you have excess solar?
@simon77902 жыл бұрын
@@brianrussell6988 No idea, the electronics all comes in the relay. The electrician just wired it in while I was there, it's a quick job. It has its own circuit from the fuse box directly to the immersion tank.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Hi Simon, great that you’ve found a solution that works well 😀 I echo Brian’s question though - would be good to understand when it kicks in 👍🏻
@simon77902 жыл бұрын
@@GaryDoesSolar Yes! The unit kicks in automatically when there is any excess solar. The data sheet says "The zero switching relay switches ON when the sinusoidal curve crosses zero and switches OFF when the current crosses zero." There are sensors on the solar and mains inputs.
@GaryDoesSolar2 жыл бұрын
Sounds great - and clearly works! 🙂
@MyWasteOfTime Жыл бұрын
Why not just use a 48v DC heating element and bypass the conversion to AC? That is how I see most people doing it here in the states...
@GaryDoesSolar Жыл бұрын
I didn't know that - sounds like a great solution!