Hello everyone. I need your help with a tricky set up. I contacted the Victron Dealer in Brisbane but wasn't convinced he actually understood the requirements of my setup. His reply was, it can't be done...
So here are the questions to the professionals out there:
Here is my situation at the moment. 3-phase supply plus PEN are coming in to the meter box at the garage. There was a 3-phase pump installed from the meter box (not any more) and the meter box has also a couple of fuses and M.E.N. link for the pump and the garage load itself. An earth rod is installed.
From this meter box at the garage, only 2 phases plus the PEN are going to the house which is ca. 50m away. Inside the house, there is another sub panel installed with RCD, breakers and 2nd M.E.N. link just for the house. Also a 2nd earth rod is next to the house.
Q1: Can I install 2 Multiplus II 48/5000 in the garage (one on each phase) and run the house from it with the existing cables (L2, L3, PEN)? See graphic below.
32kWh LiFePO4 batteries will be charged from DC through MPPTs only from the garage.
Q2: The AC-coupled solar on the house should not charge the batteries at all and only feed back into the grid (very high feed-in tariff of 54.2c/kWh). I would run the house from the grid during the day with the AC coupled solar providing power to the house and feed its excess energy back to the grid through the Multi. Due to the feed-in contract, I cannot try and maximise the feed-in power during the day (and therefore achieve a higher payout). Both Multis would be turned off or on bypass during the day, so connect L2 and L3 directly to the grid. Energy can then flow both ways without having the Multis doing anything. Again, I'm not allowed to change that. If the sun goes down, I would disconnect the grid and run the house solely from the battery as the AC coupled solar form the house would not produce any power any more.
Best scenario would be to stay connected to the grid even after sunset and the Multis powering the house and keeping the meter at 0W import. If more power is needed than they will produce (unlikely), the grid provides the remaining power.
So, is this achievable at all in any way? I'm not sure because of the PEN connection from the meter box to the house. It's not a Neutral as such.
Thanks for all your input and ideas in advance...
Cheers,
Andy