• @neomachino@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    13 hours ago

    For the longest time I thought people who had solar panels had a battery on their property somewhere, they’re panels would charge battery and they would only switch to the grid if their battery ran out.

    I don’t know much about it, but this seems like a pretty viable solution and I still can’t believe this isn’t how it works.

    • lime!
      link
      fedilink
      English
      12 hours ago

      that requires specialized equipment other than the battery. you need to generate AC from the DC of the panels and battery, and the easiest way to do that at the right frequency and phase is to follow the grid. that’s why most solar installations stop providing power without a grid connection; you need a wave to sync with.

      if you want to be truly independent you need your own wave forming equipment. and not the cheap stuff either, like the 12V inverters for cars that give out square waves. that’s fine for like a drill, but plug a computer into that and there’s a chance it fries. it won’t charge, at least not for long.

      also you need extra safeguards to not fry electrical workers when they disable the grid and your power comes flowing the other way.