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Faunsdale, AL | The important part is having some sort of transfer switch to isolate your system from utility and then a generator or small stand-alone solar with an inverter might work as well to show the large panel array that there’s a grid to charge into.
going to need a battery in there somewhere as well. I don’t think the existing controller on the large panel array will be able to modulate its power production since normally the grid is always there to suck up whatever is produced, so a charger and a battery bank on the other side of the grid tie inverter will be important I think.
Maybe prmckay (the one that did it with a generator) will come back and say how it worked. Guessing he didn’t have a battery bank to charge. So I may be all wrong about the battery. Of course it would be nice for when the sun went down to have charged up a battery even if it’s not required to get power out of your grid-tie solar panel array.
Edited by ccjersey 9/3/2024 10:20
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