I appreciate your sharing your solar background, it sounds like a fun job. The sell voltage was set to 59 per the instructions of Charles Miller from Xantrex Customer Support, thus you can appreciate my confusion. Hopefully I’ll get it all straight in my mind with your kind assistance.
Note it appears that my 3 kW PV system is selling all excess power to the electric company; in fact it is supplying over half our electric usage, and has been doing so since its installation a few months ago. It was my understanding, possibly erroneously, that setting the “Sell Supp Volts” to 59 just told the Xantrex system not to use any of the BATTERIES capability to send power to the grid.
I got up before dawn (groan) and checked the battery voltage. Everything was connected, but there had been no grid failures, and the Charge Controller was still in the Low Light condition. The battery voltage was 10.9 volts. I think this must be close to the “resting” voltage. Once daylight occurred, the Charge Controller starting putting out power, the SCC charger went to Bulk mode, and very quickly the voltage exceeded the 54-volt level I have currently set for Float, so the charger went to Absorption. It stayed there until just after 09:00 when the charger went to Float mode, at 58 volts, where it remained for the rest of the day. Obviously this is with the Sell voltage set to 59, Bulk = Absorption = 58, Float = 54.
I assume you do not want the SCC charger turned off completely, as then how would the batteries ever get recharged should a grid failure occur?
If I set the sell voltage to 52, the SCC stays in Bulk mode all day. Is this what you are suggesting is correct?
If I set the sell voltage to 55, the SCC stays in Absorption mode all day. Is this better?
I understand about not needing to charge the batteries every day, I’m just not sure how to accomplish that feat. I don’t want to rely on my having to manually start the charger if a grid failure discharges the batteries. It would be ok if I was home, but if my handicapped wife were home alone, it would be difficult for her. Worse still might be if nobody was home, for example if we were on vacation. I don’t think it would be good for the batteries to sit discharged for weeks, and I doubt that a 52 volt application would charge the batteries very quickly, if at all.
The other alternative might be to turn the SCC charger off and rely on the Inverter charger to recharge the batteries should a grid failure occur. This seems like a good idea at first, except we actually did get a long daytime grid outage recently, lasting almost all day. We made sure to really minimize our electric usage, and I watched the battery voltage just to see if I needed to start the generator to power my wife’s oxygen support. To my delight the SCC charger kicked in and maintained the batteries, as well as supplying all the Inverter power we needed. Had the SCC charger been turned off, I’m not sure exactly what would happen, but I doubt the batteries would have been recharged, would they?
So I guess I’m really not sure what you suggest I change other than the Sell voltage, unless having the SCC in the Bulk mode every day is correct. Sorry I’m so confused, and thank you for your forbearance with all my questions.
Best Regards, Chuck.
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