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cobraphil avatar image
cobraphil asked

Will a Multiplus-II work in this scenario? ESS with AC coupled PV, only want to power critical loads from battery

I am investigating the use of a Multiplus-II in the scenario illustrated below and have a couple of questions. The SMA inverter is already in place and I do not own it so therefore do not have the option to move it. I would be adding everything else in the schematic.

1) To power the critical loads, I want the power to come from the PV on DC array first, then the battery, then the PV on AC Array, then the grid. Is that possible?

2) To power the normal loads, I want the power to come from either of the PV arrays, then the grid, but never from the battery. Is that possible?

3) With the SMA and Victron inverters on the same circuit, will there be any issues such as anti-islanding conflicts?

4) On a very rare occasion, the SMA will push power to the grid. With the AC sensor installed, I am assuming the Victron will push zero power out as the net overall demand reaches zero. If the SMA were to continue to push out power to the grid, will there be any adverse effects to the Victron? Will it just stay at zero output without generating an error?

5) In a slightly different configuration, is it possible to set the ESS system to allow a certain amount of power to the grid? Say for example 2kWh?



Multiplus-II
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2 Answers
Rob Duthie avatar image
Rob Duthie answered ·

Hi


Yes to all those i have a system like this and it works great, no power bills for 11 months and in credit etc.


Regards

Rob D

NZ

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cobraphil avatar image cobraphil commented ·

Thank you Rob for your response. A couple of follow-up questions.

1) In case the mains are lost, the Multiplus-II will still power the critical loads from the PV on DC array and then the battery, but will drop the normal loads. Is that correct?

2) I have been looking through the ESS configuration manual and still have a lot to learn. But where would I find the setting to disable the battery from powering the normal loads and only powering the critical loads as asked in question 2 above?

3) If I purchase the Control Control GX, do I need to purchase the GX edition of the Multiplus-II? What would be the pros and cons of doing so?

Thanks. Still trying to understand how all of the components interact.

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marekp avatar image marekp cobraphil commented ·

You would need only one GX device in the system.

As to which one it depends on your needs.

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Rob Duthie avatar image Rob Duthie cobraphil commented ·

Hi

1 Yes

2 It is all done with ESS and the loaded assistants in the inverter etc.

3 No GX version is all included in the GX Mulitplus2 so a CCGX is not required. If you are going for a plain Mulipus2 yes you will need a CCGX of raspi controller.

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Guy Stewart (Victron Community Manager) avatar image
Guy Stewart (Victron Community Manager) answered ·

Hi @CobraPhil,

The AC PV will power the load first, then the rest with DC PV (they will share quite well), then from the battery, then lastly from the grid.

When the MultiPlus-II is connected to the grid, the critical load circuit is connected directly to the normal AC load circuit.

If you NEVER want to power the AC load from the battery, then you would need to change the location and programming of the energy meter from a grid meter, to a PV meter, depending on your SMA that might not even be necessary to have an energy meter at all. This will preclude your DC PV from powering those loads as well before the battery is charged, only the AC will power the load when battery is not full.

If you enable export of the DC, then once the battery is full, the DC PV will then be exported to the grid AFTER it first powers the Loads on the AC input of the Multi.

Do you want the battery cycling to power the critical loads even when the grid is connected, or ONLY use the battery when the grid goes down, and then use the battery to power the critical loads?

No anti-islanding conflicts with that system design. In a grid outage, the SMA will shut down. The Multi will isolate it's AC-input, and continue to provide power to the critical loads on the AC-output.

The Victron system will try to use any available power before it is exported to the grid (either to run loads or charge the battery). If there is surplus available, even if the unit has been set to not allow export, it will try it's best to use that power to prevent export, reducing PV production where it can, but if it has no control to reduce output (such as SMA), then it will report the export without an error.

You can limit the export from the system AC and DC PV to a specific amount (such as 2 kW) with the latest firmware on all devices.

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cobraphil avatar image cobraphil commented ·

Thank you Guy for your response. Your statement about the critical load and normal load being directly connected has me concerned about my proposed layout.

This installation is for a small college. The critical AC load is my house and the normal load is the rest of the college campus. I don't want any power from the DC array or battery being sent to the normal load circuit (campus) unless there is a surplus and the critical load (my house) has been fully met first. From your statement it does not sound like that is possible. Even with both PV arrays in place, we will still require the public grid. My desire is to first supply power to my house (no electric bill) and then charge the battery, and then send the surplus to help the campus electric bill.

And yes, I want the battery to cycle daily, supplying power to the critical load only (my house) at night time and recharging during the day.


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