Speedster
Honorary Master
Why do you want to express it in a number of hours?Expressed as how many hours can we use 1Kw
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Why do you want to express it in a number of hours?Expressed as how many hours can we use 1Kw
I don't eskom decided on the "unit"Why do you want to express it in a number of hours?
I don't eskom decided on the "unit"
You buy kwhours
ie how many hours can you pull a kw constant load
And then any load you pull gets calculated/changed and deducted from that total on whatever sampling rate they used on the meter probably has to be 50hz since the flow direction changes
This might help?I don't eskom decided on the "unit"
You buy kwhours
ie how many hours can you pull a kw constant load
And then any load you pull gets calculated/changed and deducted from that total on whatever sampling rate they used on the meter probably has to be 50hz since the flow direction changes

But your sheet says recommended, that's not a minimum.Tripping issues and voltage drops unrelated to capacity. I posted on the Victron community forum and I’ll try get their reply for you tomorrow - but they said the same thing in that a minimum is required.
But your sheet says recommended, that's not a minimum.
Sure you not getting drift but at excess you had that shouldn't be a issue.
The batteries do take a voltage knock when running at high output, mine shifts by over .5V or more but recovers as soon as the load returns back ( talking 100a out full bore vs my normal 600/800w which is about 20a ).
Do some deep stat digging on load, battery voltage and amapage at the time when issue oucorrs.
Possibly. You have a 2.5kva battery so my thumbsuck says at 1C you would at best be outputting 50A. If you have power feeding large appliances etc you could hit that but your inverter would limit. Keep in mind, your battery would be dead in a hour at that rate so adding in shutoff you looking at less.So back to
Even if these are are only "suggestions for reliable operation for single phase", it's something not everyone knows . It may give the impression that you can add when money is available
Regardless though - I'm ordering the other battery today, so it's a few days I live with this 'issue' .
Are you saying that the load on that single battery may cause a voltage drop and therefore a trip ? It's certainly not consistant and appears to be random
Could something like a fridge compressor kicking in potentially cause a trip in the few days while I wait for the battery?
I seriously don't use lots of power - so I'm thinking that could be the only thing
Pylontech US2000 is 0.5CPossibly. You have a 2.5kva battery so my thumbsuck says at 1C you would at best be outputting 50A. If you have power feeding large appliances etc you could hit that but your inverter would limit. Keep in mind, your battery would be dead in a hour at that rate so adding in shutoff you looking at less.
But look at your graphs and see if you can find a pattern, not SOC or only load.
Yeah I saw so that makes it 25A even. I assume that's discharge not charge or are they symmetrical?Pylontech US2000 is 0.5C
You don't need a special calculatorThis might help?
View attachment 1542693Energy consumption calculator | kWh calculator
Energy consumption calculator. kWh calculator.www.rapidtables.com
I could be wrong but I have not seen panels output at that type of efficiency.
I'm ending on about 6.8kWh today ... not too bad for winter .The solar panels will yield around 4 x 375watts x 5,9sun hours = 8,85kwhours of sun energy a day
With that load the system is suppose to work flawlesslyNope.
400-500w if that.
But basically I’m not saying that IS the issue - but there was an earlier post that said hypothetically you can have a 10kw inverter with 1kw battery.
That gave me the impression that I could just upgrade capacity as I have money, as long as the inverter is large enough. They were both independent
So in my case I was planning on getting a 2nd battery anyway - I just assumed it would work correctly until that point
With that load the system is suppose to work flawlessly