savage
Expert Member
BTW - and just BTW... I see connector blocks there at the bottom. Make -SURE- they are the correct rating for the cable that they are connecting. 2mm cable will need a 20A connector block, 1.5mm a 10A, etc.
South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
Homemade. I wanted some way of showing power present. You can get DIN rail mounted units that have indicators built in, but couldn't find mini rail equivalents. So I took apart an old broken MCB and mounted a round 10mm 230V LED inside and voila! Power indicator.
The bonding issue: I have inserted a wire bridge right at the inverter output to bond the neutral to earth. Are you saying I should rather bond it in the DB then, savage?
EDIT: Those connector blocks: I've used them to extend wires too short to reach the top row. Would it be better to use a barrel lug and crimp them and insulate with heat shrink? Is it acceptable/legal?
You are only allowed to do the bonding in one location - your main DB, so yes.
Your Red plugs are also fine and acceptable, no E/L required. Personally, I wouldn't put two (or more) plugs on one breaker if I do this however, I see you have two circuits on each breaker... Dunno how many plugs per circuit. Hmm, I should actually check this in terms of a dedicated plug / dedicated breaker type of scenario.
It seems you can now get "PLUS" models that have parallel cards built in and allow you to connect multiple axperts in parallel. Why would this be handy?
Would this allow you to expand your PV array beyond 1500w by connecting another axpert in parallel? Would you then need 2 sets of batteries? - 1 per inverter?
Connecting in parallel would allow you to combine the output of each unit. You would use a battery bank of sufficient capacity linked to all units in a daisy chain like setup, instead of 1 battery per inverter.
My Eskom supply is bonded before it gets to my DB. The 3 fat wires come out the wall, red & black to the prepaid meter, then to the 60A breaker. the earth comes straight to the bar at the bottom. Do you propose I put a link from the earth bar to the neutral of the inverter breaker? Before or after the breaker?
So essentially I'd have have 2 sources of power going into my house? - So I could start off with 1 plus unit to run essentials (for load shedding). Then expand later by adding another plus unit in parallel with its own bank of batteries and pv's?
So essentially I'd have have 2 sources of power going into my house? - So I could start off with 1 plus unit to run essentials (for load shedding). Then expand later by adding another plus unit in parallel with its own bank of batteries and pv's?
So it seems the PLUS has nothing to do with ability to connect in parallel.
Then there's no need to bond THAT neutral again - just measure it to be sure. A simple volt reading between neutral & earth, if you don't get 0V, then it's not bonded, in which case you can proceed to bond it. Only bond the neutral from the Inverter's load side, if your supply is already bonded (i.e. don't bond twice, especially not in two separate locations - it will make fault finding / troubleshooting very difficult). You need to do the bonding before any earth leakages. If your inverter's supply is after a earth leakage, you can't bond either (e/l will trip in bypass mode), hence why I'm always preaching that the inverter's supply should NOT be behind a E/L device.
7.12.3.1.3 Where alternative supplies are installed remotely from the
installation, or from one another, and where it is not possible to make use of a
single neutral bar which is earthed, the neutral of each unit shall be earthed
at the unit and these points shall be bonded to the consumer's earth terminal
(see 6.12.4). The supply from each unit which supplies the installation or part
of the installation, shall be switched by means of a switch that breaks all live
conductors operating substantially together (see annex S), to disconnect the
earthed neutral point from the installation neutral when the alternative supply
is not connected (see also 6.1.6).
Just to check, should you tie your inverter's load side to earth inside the main DB or at the inverter? I was thinking of doing it inside the small DB close to the inverter and on the inverter's side of the output double breaker that I will install. I got the idea from the generator schematic in the SANS 10142-1 doc and also from this section:
But maybe I just got it wrong.And not I have a "consumer's earth terminal" that I know of. :erm:
6.11.1 Each installation shall have a consumer's earth terminal (see 3.18) at or near the point where the supply cables to the installation enter the building or structure. All conductive parts that are to be earthed (see 6.12.3) shall be connected to a main earthing terminal (see 3.29.4), which shall be connected to the consumer's earth terminal. The consumer's earth terminal shall be earthed by connecting it to the supply earth terminal (see 3.78) or the protective conductor (see 3.15.8) and, if installed, the earth electrode. The effectiveness of the supplier's protective conductor shall be determined in accordance with 8.7.5.
Maybe I should just look at starting with the 5kva and focus on its specs. It should be more than enough to help me through load shedding for now. Later I'll look at adding some pv's to reduce my usage and reliance on eskum.
I would think you would use ONE bank for all the inverters instead of each inverter having its own bank. So if you add a second unit, it would hook up to the existing bank. The power generated from each inverter would then be combined into a single input to your house. I'm not an electrician, neither have I setup such a configuration but that looks like the way it would be setup.
Also you would need to make sure each unit is identical in terms of battery voltage or you could risk blowing up the units i.e. don't combine 24V with 48V etc.
Edit : And like savage says - only certain units are compatible with the parallel cards.
A quick google has revealed the following : "Axpert MKS plus is similar to Axpert MKS series but with bigger MPPT solar charge controller."
So it seems the PLUS has nothing to do with ability to connect in parallel.
The idea of people making Neutral to Earth bonds anywhere in the installation, including the DB is making me very nervous. I'd strongly recommend you don't make a N-E connection ANYWHERE, EVER, without getting advice from a qualified sparky who has an understanding of the supply and earthing arrangements of your particular installation.
On a different note, if you have 2x 3KVA with 2x battery banks, and 2x EL in the house DB, with 2 separate circuits, you would have some form of redundancy. This is quite handy is the Expert fails or the batteries need replacement, or your heavy load items drain the batteries too quick - then at least you could still have some lights and TV.