Hello Community,
I recently purchased two Canadian Solar CS6P-250P panels in order to begin a scaleable grid tie system for my home. I found a couple of LT-SunD-250G (http://www.chinesegrid.com/Solar-Gri...N-250G433.html) Tie Power Inverters on Ebay and bought them.
What I found when I mounted and ran all my wiring is that if the tie grid inverter is rated from 10.8 to 30 VDC input, THAT IS ALL IT WILL ACCEPT. My panel is pumping out at between 33-34V on an open circuit. The SUND-250G's barf and immediatly go into a default mode.
I ended up tapping off the single panel and adding a solar charger (to reduce the voltage without ruining my efficiency too much). It works, crappy, but it works. My panel is feeding about .45A @ 120VAC and about 1.2A @ 12VDC to charge my battery.
I'm going to end up scrapping this design and move foward and purchase an inverter which supports the higher input voltage. My budget is about $150-$200 USD. I saw that Amazon has http://amzn.com/B005N2B0C2 for about $175. Does anyone have any feedback on this or any similiar to them?
I also noticed that Power One and Enphase make some around this price range (http://www.affordable-solar.com/stor...ters-grid-tied) but they are all 200VAC (three phase). This would require some more infastructure and defeat my design goal of a cost efficient system.
Any guidance will be greatly appreciated.
I recently purchased two Canadian Solar CS6P-250P panels in order to begin a scaleable grid tie system for my home. I found a couple of LT-SunD-250G (http://www.chinesegrid.com/Solar-Gri...N-250G433.html) Tie Power Inverters on Ebay and bought them.
What I found when I mounted and ran all my wiring is that if the tie grid inverter is rated from 10.8 to 30 VDC input, THAT IS ALL IT WILL ACCEPT. My panel is pumping out at between 33-34V on an open circuit. The SUND-250G's barf and immediatly go into a default mode.
I ended up tapping off the single panel and adding a solar charger (to reduce the voltage without ruining my efficiency too much). It works, crappy, but it works. My panel is feeding about .45A @ 120VAC and about 1.2A @ 12VDC to charge my battery.
I'm going to end up scrapping this design and move foward and purchase an inverter which supports the higher input voltage. My budget is about $150-$200 USD. I saw that Amazon has http://amzn.com/B005N2B0C2 for about $175. Does anyone have any feedback on this or any similiar to them?
I also noticed that Power One and Enphase make some around this price range (http://www.affordable-solar.com/stor...ters-grid-tied) but they are all 200VAC (three phase). This would require some more infastructure and defeat my design goal of a cost efficient system.
Any guidance will be greatly appreciated.
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