hi,
Can anyone offer advice or point me in the right direction on how to wire in a solar divert feed into our existing wiring?
The existing wiring looks like this (see photos below). There's an input feed coming from a secondary consumer unit in the utility room, into an isolator switch, then to a control switch box with a contactor switch in it with 'on', 'off', 'auto' settings. 'Auto' mode allows the Nibe ASHP to control the immersion heater (for legionella and boosting the water temps). I want to wire in a second input feed, which is coming from a solar diverter on the main consumer unit (not the same as in the utility room). The solar diverter is an 'mk2router' as designed by Robin Emery and popular on the OpenEnergyMonitoring site.
I'm not quite sure how i should wire this second feed in so that it doesn't cause problems with the ASHP control of the immersion. I don't really need to run both the ASHP control circuit and the solar diverter circuit at the same time.
The house is single-phase, and the secondary consumer unit is connected to the main consumer unit.
Can anyone offer advice or point me in the right direction on how to wire in a solar divert feed into our existing wiring?
The existing wiring looks like this (see photos below). There's an input feed coming from a secondary consumer unit in the utility room, into an isolator switch, then to a control switch box with a contactor switch in it with 'on', 'off', 'auto' settings. 'Auto' mode allows the Nibe ASHP to control the immersion heater (for legionella and boosting the water temps). I want to wire in a second input feed, which is coming from a solar diverter on the main consumer unit (not the same as in the utility room). The solar diverter is an 'mk2router' as designed by Robin Emery and popular on the OpenEnergyMonitoring site.
I'm not quite sure how i should wire this second feed in so that it doesn't cause problems with the ASHP control of the immersion. I don't really need to run both the ASHP control circuit and the solar diverter circuit at the same time.
The house is single-phase, and the secondary consumer unit is connected to the main consumer unit.