| @www.ajhurst.org |
| Administration | Research | Teaching | Professional | Personal | Photos | Railways | Site map |
John Hurst's Personal Page| Environment Stuff | |
|---|---|
|
|
|
The two plots above show watt hours generated per day by our solar panels and grid interactive inverter. This first plot shows the daily cycle for today and the last 4 days, while the second plot shows the total daily energy every day since installation. Clicking each plot will show more detail. Incidentally, the lines at the far left of the daily plot evident during daylight saving are an artifact of that circumstance. The logging device remains on standard time, while the plotting takes place on a DS-aware computer. Hence the lines represent the last hour before midnight of the previous day. There is a slight liberty taken with the data in the second plot. This was due to equipment failure over the summer of 2004/5. Data from the previous summer is substituted to maintain the shape of the graph. As the data shows a slight upward trend (more likely due to tree clearing than global warming!), this should not distort the analysis too much. The daily plot is generated by our house computer, and updated automatically every 10 minutes. The long-term plot is generated manually (last update 20080427). The solar assembly consists of 20x75W panels (1500W total) feeding into a Trace 3024E 3300W inverter system, buffered by 4 Sonnenschein 6v 330AH gel cells (7920WH). In sunny weather, the system generates enough power that the meter is usually spinning backwards! Two of the house power circuits (including the refrigerator and all computers) are fed from this inverter, giving about 24 hours of autonomy (at normal current levels) in the event of grid supply failure. (see footnote *) Our current electricity drawdown from the grid is about 14KWh per day (averaged over the year), and the solar system supplies an average of 4.6KWh (see chart above). That gives an average fraction of about one quarter of our electricity needs being supplied by the sun. That translates a saving of approximately $0.67 a day. The system cost about $6000 ($4000 for the inverter, $2000 for the rebated solar panels, not counting the batteries, which are only for UPS protection), and will therefore pay for itself (assuming no increase in electricity costs, an unrealistic assumption) in about 25 years! But of course, we are also saving about 2.5 tonnes of greenhouse gas a year, (roughly) the equivalent of not driving our car anywhere for the year. We also have a rainwater system consisting of two 2250 litre Plastanks, fed from the house roof, and pressurised by a 240v Onga Riva-Flo TF30 centrifugal pump. This pump delivers 30 litres/minute at 8 metres head, and is quite adequate for our purposes. Delivery is to two toilet cisterns, and to a garden watering system (8 solenoid operated outlets and 2 standpipes). The garden watering system is driven automatically by cron jobs running on the house computer. We used to have the water level in the rainwater tanks monitored electronically and displayed here as well; however corrosion problems forced the abandonment of this. There are plans to re-introduce the system, using 1-wire technology. Watch this space! |
|
| General Stuff | |
|
|
| Railway Stuff | |
|
|
| Meccano Stuff | |
|
|
(footnote *): The irony of this is that while my wife and I were away on a week's holiday, my son and his band cronies plugged guitars and amplifiers into the UPS circuit, and played so loudly that they overloaded the inverter, tripping its overcurrent protection, and turning off the fridge. He simply moved to another power point and thought no more about it, until he noticed all the icecream running out the bottom of the fridge! We came home to a disaster! Just goes to show, such systems are not 'fool-proof'!
| This page maintained by
John Hurst. Copyright |
|
![]() |
|
Dynamically generated at
20080705:0936
from an XML file modified on
20080429:1716.
| |||