Aha, I hadn't realised that inverters are that smart. Does 2 Solis inverters come out cheaper than a single 10kw one? I'd expect a single larger unit to be easier to work with and cheaper, but as demonstrated I clearly don't know that much.
https://onestepoffthegrid.com.au/solar-unlimited-use-inverters-get-past-export-limits/
nope more expensive. Should be able to in most cases do it with 1 inverter.
but it depends on the panels you have and their total volts and amps and the inverter... I don’t know how true but was told it’s a good practice thing to have 1 per array so a roof with 2 sides would under that case use 2.. 1 for each side, although in practice I suspect vast majority only use 1.
Could be wrong, still learning myself and all relatively new to me also.
I’m planning on using SolarEdge inverters and optimisers which add quite a bit to the cost as the optimisers are £40 odd each.
But a basic inverter will work for most people and that’s all the vast majority fit and works out cheaper.
when you wire panels in series, the volts add up... so if you have 10v panel, and 6 of them it’s 10+10+10+10+10+10 which is 60v
and when you wire them in parallel the voltage stays the same, but the amperage adds up.
so it would be 10amp +10amp = 20amp
the spec on the panels I’m planning on using is,
50.02v each
10.24amps each
So say I had 9.6kw, that’s 24 panels.
50.02 * 24 = 1200.48v
But a 8kw SolarEdge inverter is listed as only being able to take a maximum of 480v on each input.
so even if you had split it into 2x 12 panel strings, that’s still 600.24v
Would need to split it into 4x 6 panel strings, that’s 300.12v which is within the inverter capability.
Then pair off them so you end up with 2 pairs of 2x series strings in parallel. If that makes any sense lol
So,
6 panels + 6 panels \
12 panels
12 panels
6 panels + 6 panels /
then when you look at amps.
and 10.24 + 10.24 becomes 20.48amps
which is only just within the capability of the inverter I’m using as it has a max of 20.5amp... but flip side is for reliability would you want to be running it right on the limit of its maximum capability?
ive listed 8kw, for 10kw array because apparently here in the UK it works better in lower light conditions if it’s under rated by 20%. Again don’t know how true but on an 8kw inverter it says it will handle up to 12.4kw so it’s fine.
but yes 1 is cheaper, and in most cases 1 should be enough. But it depends on the panels, inverter, and size of system.