Are you forcing exports?
You "had" more than 80kWh coming into your home and exported over half of it. You export more than you import so I presume you're netting a profit at the moment. Presumably you import at night to charge your car/batteries?
Perhaps I should focus more on export but tbh I'm quite happy just reducing the amount of electricity I import!
On average over the last 7 days I import maybe 3-4kWh from the grid.
With a system like yours I suppose you have more flexibility to play around with various strategies.
Being grid more independent just costs you more money.
The grid has pricing signals which are loosely based on ‘scarcity’ and carbon emissions. The higher the price, the more carbon Intensive the grid is and the less capacity there is.
Buy low, sell high is the best way you can support the grid and cost you the least amount of money.
Think of it as a big energy trading scheme.
I do pretty much the same as Ronski but on good days have to make sure the batteries are depleted as much as possible to balance the generation, storage and export for the that particular day.But when you're on tariffs like flux there's little fluctuation in the price it's fairly fixed so I guess you'd need to go onto a more "agile" sort of tariff to really do that buy low sell high strategy?
I guess I've just become complacent with my solar and battery after a few years of having it. Ronski's strategy has just made me think/consider changing things.
Perhaps I should look at HA to do some more intelligent exporting/importing.
but on good days have to make sure the batteries are depleted as much as possible to balance the generation, storage and export for the that particular day.
Limited with the ability export no more than 5 kW per inverter ( 10 kW) subject to house load. But I can charge 3.3 kW to each set of batteries at the same time (hybrid inverters) giving me a max potential usable of 16.6 kW.All the time its cheaper per kWh compared to what you get for export, then financially you're better off fully charging the batteries overnight.
I charge at 7p and export at 15p on IOG, yes there is some efficiency losses, and there is wear and tear on the system, but I'm not concerned about that.
If you don't have an EV you can get on Octopus Go, yes you're supposed to have an EV, but no one asks for proof, and if you're charging a battery every night it looks like an EV. Thats 8.5p cheap rate, and 15p export.
I think Agile is just too much hassle, there are people that automate it, but its a lot of work, and if you don't have a powerful inverter then I should think it could be quite problematic. It can also get very expensive, its been a £1 a kWh recently, and not many cheap slots either.
I was on Flux, and I used to charge every night, but even with my 8kW inverter I couldn't fully charge my batteries, the peak export slot was also only three hours, and I needed to make sure I kept enough back to last until the cheap slot which I think was 1am, so I would stop exporting at 45% SOC.
When I looked at the sums in December, Go would cost me far less, well, make me more profit, I should have switched ages ago.
I do consider I'm helping the grid, during the day I export all excess, and through out the evening I export, I do feel a little guilty that I don't export in the peak period (thats down to saving sessions), but now summer is coming I'm still exporting excess solar after 4pm.
These systems cost a lot of money, so maximising what they save is key.
At the end of the day, I'm doing just the same as lot of people on here, and other forums do, my main difference is I spread it out, so I'm not exporting at 8kW at 23:00 for example.
If you want to maximise your ROI then you do need to make the system work, but it does depend a lot on the system and size of battery.
Is that because you are DNO export limited?
I tell you what seems to be a bit of an issue now though. Octopus' systems seem to recognise when you're exporting and the car is plugged in. Without fail now, if I'm exporting in an evening it'll start charging the car if it's plugged in despite there being no prior notice of an earlier slot. It happened again yesterday: I plugged in and was given a charge period of 23:00 to 05:30. I started exporting at 20:30 as normal and Octopus started the car charging from 21:00 to 22:30 with no notice at all, essentially stealing the export in that time.All the time its cheaper per kWh compared to what you get for export, then financially you're better off fully charging the batteries overnight.
I charge at 7p and export at 15p on IOG, yes there is some efficiency losses, and there is wear and tear on the system, but I'm not concerned about that.
If you don't have an EV you can get on Octopus Go, yes you're supposed to have an EV, but no one asks for proof, and if you're charging a battery every night it looks like an EV. Thats 8.5p cheap rate, and 15p export.
I think Agile is just too much hassle, there are people that automate it, but its a lot of work, and if you don't have a powerful inverter then I should think it could be quite problematic. It can also get very expensive, its been a £1 a kWh recently, and not many cheap slots either.
I was on Flux, and I used to charge every night, but even with my 8kW inverter I couldn't fully charge my batteries, the peak export slot was also only three hours, and I needed to make sure I kept enough back to last until the cheap slot which I think was 1am, so I would stop exporting at 45% SOC.
When I looked at the sums in December, Go would cost me far less, well, make me more profit, I should have switched ages ago.
I do consider I'm helping the grid, during the day I export all excess, and through out the evening I export, I do feel a little guilty that I don't export in the peak period (thats down to saving sessions), but now summer is coming I'm still exporting excess solar after 4pm.
These systems cost a lot of money, so maximising what they save is key.
At the end of the day, I'm doing just the same as lot of people on here, and other forums do, my main difference is I spread it out, so I'm not exporting at 8kW at 23:00 for example.
If you want to maximise your ROI then you do need to make the system work, but it does depend a lot on the system and size of battery.
Is that because you are DNO export limited?