It is very common to have the inverter installed in the loft, but my size of batteries, probably not. They weigh a lot. A 5kWh wall mount battery is much smaller and lighter and wouldn't be an issue.
You just have to be aware of temperature with electronics and batteries. Too hot and they could be stressed, cooling fans running all the time. Too cold and batteries suffer. You might need to box around the batteries and include a fan and a greenhouse heater to control temperature extremes.
My kit is in the garage for these reasons close to the consumer unit.
The fronius GEN24 inverters coupled with a battery will run when the grid fails. It's a feature of these high tech inverters. Either powering a single socket for manual emergency use or (with a complex and probably expensive bank of specialist relays) they can do auto switchover of as many circuits as you want subject to the discharge capacity of the battery.
There is incidentally, an absolute obligation not to back feed the grid from your solar system. You and your installer don't have a choice in this and to prevent it the majority of inverters simply won't work when disconnected from the grid, battery or not.
I will experiment with this - keeping lights, boiler and the IT on during a power cut is nice to have but honestly we don't go off very often and it wouldn't be worth the hundreds that it would cost to build the switching circuits for auto changeover and prevent any chance of feeding back into the grid.
A simple socket will probably do me.
As for meters. Fronius GEN24 inverters will do export limitation. Mine is setup that way. A Fronius smart meter is needed to control that. Export limitation means that the inverter will automatically limit the amount of power it tries to feed into the grid - necessary sometimes because the grid can't absorb it without (for example) the localised voltage on the grid being pushed too high. In the summer, this feature was working a lot. Our generation was often several kW and whenever we weren't using enough ourselves, the inverter throttled back to limit the amount we put into the grid to no more than a basic 4kW system would.
There's another electronic meter installed - a standard device to keep a simple record of total generated power.
We don't yet have a smart meter. That was a disgraceful affair if you read about the way the energy co's mismanaged the entire project and wasted £100's of millions, so I've refused one to date. Now they are finally getting a grip, I will let them put one in once my batteries are installed and I'm happy with everything else.
A smart meter is being made a condition of access to ev tariffs and others that vary by time and day of the week so they are inevitable in the long run.
(We made 26kWh today)
You just have to be aware of temperature with electronics and batteries. Too hot and they could be stressed, cooling fans running all the time. Too cold and batteries suffer. You might need to box around the batteries and include a fan and a greenhouse heater to control temperature extremes.
My kit is in the garage for these reasons close to the consumer unit.
The fronius GEN24 inverters coupled with a battery will run when the grid fails. It's a feature of these high tech inverters. Either powering a single socket for manual emergency use or (with a complex and probably expensive bank of specialist relays) they can do auto switchover of as many circuits as you want subject to the discharge capacity of the battery.
There is incidentally, an absolute obligation not to back feed the grid from your solar system. You and your installer don't have a choice in this and to prevent it the majority of inverters simply won't work when disconnected from the grid, battery or not.
I will experiment with this - keeping lights, boiler and the IT on during a power cut is nice to have but honestly we don't go off very often and it wouldn't be worth the hundreds that it would cost to build the switching circuits for auto changeover and prevent any chance of feeding back into the grid.
A simple socket will probably do me.
As for meters. Fronius GEN24 inverters will do export limitation. Mine is setup that way. A Fronius smart meter is needed to control that. Export limitation means that the inverter will automatically limit the amount of power it tries to feed into the grid - necessary sometimes because the grid can't absorb it without (for example) the localised voltage on the grid being pushed too high. In the summer, this feature was working a lot. Our generation was often several kW and whenever we weren't using enough ourselves, the inverter throttled back to limit the amount we put into the grid to no more than a basic 4kW system would.
There's another electronic meter installed - a standard device to keep a simple record of total generated power.
We don't yet have a smart meter. That was a disgraceful affair if you read about the way the energy co's mismanaged the entire project and wasted £100's of millions, so I've refused one to date. Now they are finally getting a grip, I will let them put one in once my batteries are installed and I'm happy with everything else.
A smart meter is being made a condition of access to ev tariffs and others that vary by time and day of the week so they are inevitable in the long run.
(We made 26kWh today)
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