Whether Sun Power or anyone else builds the inverter into the battery chassis or keeps it external, there has to be an inverter for DC>AC. -Phil
Makes senseWhether Sun Power or anyone else builds the inverter into the battery chassis or keeps it external, there has to be an inverter for DC>AC. -Phil
mine was installed well after the class suit and I have never had a single problem from day1
During the month of May I produced 201% of what I used and for the past 4 years I have never received an electric bill and I continue to have a credit balance of well over $500 in my account
RF bath
OoOoOooooo Extreme + DC... OoOoOo, Ahhhhhhhh,, bliss.....I prefer to listen when my house is drawing completely from my panels. ( ie daytime)
once I install wall batteries I prefer to run my house and not my sound system. Finally wrt DC I’m looking forward to the Taiko Extreme DC and battery upgrade. This would allow for DC use of the digital side of my system 24 x 7
@213Cobra Phil - I’m looking into a solar setup with Powerwalls also, and your experience with the ‘RF bath’ is quite concerning to me.I have solar panels + two Tesla Powerwall batteries. Whether your solar array uses micro-inverters or gangs all the panel outputs into one inverter, you will end up with a second inverter for the Tesla Powerwall(s). Depending where you live and the seasons, solar can easily charge the Powerwall + power your home during the day, after which the Powerwall(s) extend your solar power availability by releasing battery-stored solar-generated energy. I live in Los Angeles, where LADWP determines how much solar capacity you may install based on your prior two years of power consumption, if you are going to remain connected to their grid. So in my case in the winter when we get rain -- IF we get rain -- the Powerwalls won't get fully refilled.
You can set the percentage of Powerwall capacity you want reserved for power outages, so in the evening when the house is powered from batteries, that will end once the reserve percentage is reached. During pending storm expectations, Tesla automatically charges to full from the grid, if necessary, and stops discharging to maintain a full battery for the duration of a storm watch.
I can sometimes convince myself that the hifi sounds a trifle better during the evenings when my house is battery powered, but then even later, ala 2am when I am back on the grid, at can sound even better. So the Powerwall isn't a significant advantage to SQ. I don't detect any real change in powerline pollution from batteries. The solar + batteries system does not create powerline noise I didn't have before. The primary new problem introduced by my solar + Poweralls has been the RF bath I didn't have before. It complicates amp selection more than anything as some tube amps in particular are highly effective antennas for the resulting RFI, routing it directly into both hifi systems in my house. That's the one tricky new element introduced by solar + Powerwalls. I got solar installed first back in 2017. Powerwalls were backordered so there was about a five month period where I experienced the RF problems generated by solar alone. Then the difference adding batteries made was easy to detect.
Aside from the RF shower coming off the panels array over my main room, the now-utility wall where everything is mounted has two inverters, each of which has both cellular and wifi. The second inverter added to the noise-fighting challenge. It took about a year of experimentation and some system reconfigurations to get back to where I was, noise-wise, before putting a power station on my house.
Phil
My system is all tubes and SET amps. There is zero noise in my system from my panels. The micro inverter at each panel takes care of the EMI. A single large inverter at the end of the panels is the culprit in your system. You should look into micro inverters as you will solve your problem. I play my system during daylight so that I am entirely playing on solar power. I have zero EMI and when I tell people that they are listening via solar power, they all say they can hear no differenceSeatrope,
There is quite extensive evidence that solar panels alone emit EMF, though it's neither dangerous nor extensive. Many SET amps happen to be perfect antennas for it, via their inputs, especially if overhead. The inverters arrangement is certainly aggrativive. In my case; the installation was done in 2017 when micro-inverters were much less common. I have a master inverter mounted on the side of my house not proximate to my listening area. If you are using string inverters it can't hurt to physically keep them as far away as possible. However, if you are not using SET amps, you probably have little to worry about, and I've since found some SET and PSET amps that are not functioning antennas for the noise.
Happy to answer any further questions.
Phil
Experiences are varied. I know of installations with micro-inverters that are noisy and some with large inverter installations that are quiet. Hifi system variables are part of the equation. I eventually solved my problem by finding SET amps that do not function as antennas for the RF noise, and I've yet to find any push-pull tube amps that are susceptible to it. Single-Ended Tetrode and Pentode tube amps also have proven immune thus far.My system is all tubes and SET amps. There is zero noise in my system from my panels. The micro inverter at each panel takes care of the EMI. A single large inverter at the end of the panels is the culprit in your system. You should look into micro inverters as you will solve your problem. I play my system during daylight so that I am entirely playing on solar power. I have zero EMI and when I tell people that they are listening via solar power, they all say they can hear no difference
I find that difficult to believeHi again all. Thanks @Steve Williams and @213Cobra Phil for your perspectives. Unfortunately there are no companies offering to install a microinverter based system in my area of Maine.
Does anyone have any experience with Solaredge inverters or Sol-Ark inverters and their effect on audio?
The only info I'm getting is that most inverters are the transformerless types these days, that use high frequency DSP to synthesize a high resolution sine wave. Not sure how these respond to audio loads and transients. Datasheets state <3% for Sol-Ark on battery and grid-tied, <3% for Solaredge grid-tied and <5% on battery.
I'm planning to have battery backup as well. As noted on another audio forum as an article, some have found subjective improvements when the house is on pure battery power. I guess this again all depends on the inverter (Tesla in the article). What's confusing is Tesla used to use Solaredge inverters and now have moved to their own.
Yeah none of them do direct work in my area, sadly. Even Tesla is through a 3rd party with huge markup.I find that difficult to believe
Did you call Sun Power or Tesla or Panasonic etc
In my experience, micro-inverter vs. master inverter is not much of an issue, in part because the master inverter is usually many feet or yards away mounted on a side wall of your house. For example, I have a master-inverter. I have two hifis. The primary hifi directly under the solar panels is the one susceptible to the waterfall of RF noise emitted by the panels when running certain SET amps. The system that is NOT directly under the solar glass but IS CLOSER to the house-mounted wall inverter is unaffected by the power system's RFI.Hi again all. Thanks @Steve Williams and @213Cobra Phil for your perspectives. Unfortunately there are no companies offering to install a microinverter based system in my area of Maine.
Does anyone have any experience with Solaredge inverters or Sol-Ark inverters and their effect on audio?
The only info I'm getting is that most inverters are the transformerless types these days, that use high frequency DSP to synthesize a high resolution sine wave. Not sure how these respond to audio loads and transients. Datasheets state <3% for Sol-Ark on battery and grid-tied, <3% for Solaredge grid-tied and <5% on battery.
I'm planning to have battery backup as well. As noted on another audio forum as an article, some have found subjective improvements when the house is on pure battery power. I guess this again all depends on the inverter (Tesla in the article). What's confusing is Tesla used to use Solaredge inverters and now have moved to their own.
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