Essentially correct, but you need to raise the grid support voltage or else you'll harm your batteries.
It takes a bit of experimentation to get the correct grid support voltage. The best starting point is approximately the manufacturer's recommended "Float" voltage. You'll have to monitor the system's performance over a few clear sunny days, paying careful attention to how early in the day the voltage rises back to the grid support voltage. A few times disconnecting the AC input circuit breaker to verify that the batteries are maintaining capacity is also helping.
If the batteries immediately rise to the grid support voltage, lower it by a single step, then see how the system behaves the next time. As soon as it takes a little longer than before to reach the grid support voltage, increase the value by .1 volts.
What you're doing is minimizing the amount of power that's wasted on keeping the batteries charged, while maximizing the available capacity.
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