jens wrote:
I don't see how voltage and phase come into the picture since all you are trying to do is to reduce current to the meter to a minimum. At worst, additional current probes will be required. Who knows, maybe there are issues here I don't yet see/understand.
Because you can't tell if you are using or generating 10 amps into your utility feed... Say, for the sake of argument, you are currently generating 40 amps, and you know for sure that the meter is showing you consuming 10 amps from the utility service.
Then, you turn of the A/C (or electric heater, or irrigation pump, etc.) that was consuming 20 amps... Bang, you are now pumping 10 amps out the meter instead... And your control circuit is still happy.
The only way you could catch this problem with a non-directional current clamp would be to dither the generator output... Say drop its output by 5 amps... If the meter current goes up, then you are a net consumer, if the meter current goes down, then, you are net generator...
If the meter current stays zero then you were a net generator by 2.5 amps (unless something turned on/off during this period)...
But, in the end, if you are using non-directional current clamps--then you could measure separate currents--one for your loads, the other for your generator... Assuming the loads are always consumption, and the generator is always a source, then a simple difference between the two probes would give you the answer (assuming all is calibrated, nothing is broke, etc.).
Will still be the equivalent of GT and need permits. In the end, I don't know of any GT inverter/interface that supports real-time energy output control. Not that it could not be done (albeit with a bit more complexity), but that a person would still need all of the permits and approvals of a "real" GT system--so it does not make too much sense.
Regarding efficiencies, the 77% is based on Solar PV panel name plate wattage and system losses... Probably 10-15% of that number is simply the way STC (standard test conditions) are defined for solar PV which over estimates output (of panels in typical installations). The rest are based on controller, wiring, and dust on panel type losses. Dropping from 77% to ~52-54% are the 20% losses with flooded cell batteries and typical inverter inefficiencies (80%*85%=68% overall efficiency as an example).
Lastly, just controlling pulse width to the SCRs (if that is your plan)--is no longer acceptable for AC attached equipment in the US and Europe... Doing this changes the pure sine wave form into a "broken" AC sine wave which ruins power factor... I believe that the sine wave must have 5% or less harmonics for a GT attached inverter/device.
-Bill