konfab
Honorary Master
The issue is phase synchronisation. Remember, your electricity comes in an AC signal, which is a sine wave. If you want generators to work together, they have to be in phase elsewise they will cause destructive interference.What happens if they’re backfeeding and the eskom main power returns as well? Since they didn’t isolate that feed?

If your generator is 180 degrees out of phase, your generator will effectively be fighting Eskom with every wave of power. Which will probably not make it last long on the earth and it will release it's blue smoke soul and shuffle off its mortal coils. Whilst it is doing this, it will probably act like a giant load on the system thus constraining the utility even more.
Without a phase-locked loop (a device that detects and aligns the phase of an AC signal source), you have no way to synchronise your generator with the grid.
This is why Eskom's greatest fear is a cascade failure. Every power station in the country has sensors on it that will disconnect it from the grid if there is too much load for the station to handle. (The frequency of the system starts deviating from 50Hz) When one large power station trips, it will cause a cascade failure as other stations will get more load and trip as well. Thus the entire grid will go down.
In order to get the grid back up, they have to pick a station, which usually would be Koeberg because it is the most reliable station in the country, and use it as the "source of truth" for the phase. They would then have to bring up every power station in the country gradually as they lock onto the signal sent by Koeberg through the transmission lines. Once they do that, they would be able to start connecting residential customers to the grid again.
So no, please don't connect your generator to the grid.
Edit: fixed the stupid 50Hz
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