First of all, there will most likely be 2 separate meters, one to monitor your solar production ONLY, and the other one is the main meter monitoring the combination of consumption and production combined. The one for monitoring the solar production ONLY (usually put in place for SREC credit counting by the utility company) will be the one that "gives you away", telling the utility company that your production is above the norm (if you expand).
Secondly, your question on whether there's a way to ensure that the solar power is used up "without backfeeding the grid" (your own word) is not synonymous with a grid-tied system because the whole idea of a grid-tied system IS to BACKFEED into the grid to get energy credit banked to be used later at a time when there's no solar production.
OK, this clarifies it. But you did write before that you were going to build your own panels and additional microinverters. Unless you meant one thing and wrote another thing due to bad writing. Below is the quote on exactly what you wrote:
Secondly, your question on whether there's a way to ensure that the solar power is used up "without backfeeding the grid" (your own word) is not synonymous with a grid-tied system because the whole idea of a grid-tied system IS to BACKFEED into the grid to get energy credit banked to be used later at a time when there's no solar production.
OK, this clarifies it. But you did write before that you were going to build your own panels and additional microinverters. Unless you meant one thing and wrote another thing due to bad writing. Below is the quote on exactly what you wrote:
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