I get the feeling this is an inverter problem. The fact that all four of them are acting the same rules out a product failure, but they are definitely not acting properly and you should get the manufacturer's techline involved except it doesn't appear to have one. Try calling their main phone 800.374.4494. Grosolar is not a very common brand and not having a tech service is a major dis-qualifier in my book.
I don't think the grid can refuse the power like this. If there was enough line impedance to restrict the power, the voltage would go up enough to trip the inverters off - not throttle them to partial power. Interference from overhead powerlines? That's grasping at straws.
The 50kV transformer could somehow be the problem. Why is it even there? Are you feeding a high-voltage line? Is it possible to remove the transformer and just run one inverter into the grid?
I've never seen an inverter throttle back due to an AC side issue. I would think the only way to have them running at a low level is if the array power level is low.
All very interesting.
I don't think the grid can refuse the power like this. If there was enough line impedance to restrict the power, the voltage would go up enough to trip the inverters off - not throttle them to partial power. Interference from overhead powerlines? That's grasping at straws.
The 50kV transformer could somehow be the problem. Why is it even there? Are you feeding a high-voltage line? Is it possible to remove the transformer and just run one inverter into the grid?
I've never seen an inverter throttle back due to an AC side issue. I would think the only way to have them running at a low level is if the array power level is low.
All very interesting.
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