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System Energy Audit and Sizing Spread Sheet

System Energy Audit and Sizing Spread Sheet 2021-01-29

Reviews 4.83 star(s) 18 reviews

A great way to get started building !!!
thanks
Didn't see it, but given the staggering number of times it comes up, recommend inverter idle power consumption be added to the sheet as the FIRST item.
Pretty good spreadsheet! I would only add one other item to calculate - inverter standby consumption.

My 24v Growatt whittles my little 100ah battery down pretty good throughout the day.
Great work. One thing I'm not seeing is a line or a note about inverter idle or losses. On smaller systems this can end up being the single largest energy user. Thank you.
This is great. Was gonna do my own after seeing others available online but thus is impressive enough to actually use it and not reinvent another whee!
As usual, FilterGuy does not disappoint, this is a great calculator! Thanks !
Excellent, easy-to-use system calculator ala Excel. Thank you ?
I have a question, the sheet is multipling the watts by the hours of usage to calculate everything, how ever when I use my kill a watt on my devices I get a totaly different story, for example the desktop computer is using 100 wats so if I use it for one hour the sheet calculates 100 wh but my kill a watt is saying that the computer is using 0.075 kwh so in one hour is using only 75 wh, the fan is actually using 0.04 kwh while is a 60 w am I doing something wrong? Maybe the wattage is the maximum usage in extreme conditions?
FilterGuy
FilterGuy
Correct,
The nameplate wattage will always be the max wattage. The actual wattage will always be less. In the case of a laptop, it gets even more complicated. The load for a laptop is going to vary based on a combination of the state of charge of the battery along with the activity on the computer. For a laptop, the actual usage for most people will almost always be a lot less than the name-plate number.

Almost without exception, the Kill-a-watt measured value will be more accurate (and less) than the name-plate value.
I noticed an issue with the spreadsheet that I wanted to bring to attention.

First, Cell P33 is supposed to add all of the DC Watt hours together (SUM(P6:32)) but instead refers only to P8:32 witch misses the first two cells in that column. Minor change but it can have a big difference if your first two items that you are trying to do an audit on are DC loads.

Secondly, I have a question regarding the logic behind the "Required Total daily Solar output (Sunny)" calculation in the Solar Array Sizing section. The formula adds both the batteries "Daily Storage Requirement" and the" min Battery capacity W-Hrs" together? Isn't this like doubling the capacity needed to recharge the battery? Also, the formula then multiplies the answer by the Max discharge from full CHARGE. I don't believe this would be needed to be done if you just started with min Battery capacity W-Hrs in the fist place.

Example: If the spreadsheet says that my Daily Storage Requirement is 1897 Watt Hours Per Day and I set a 85% Max discharge from full CHARGE, the min Battery capacity W-Hrs shows as 2231.2 W-hrs. My solar panel array only needs to put 1897 Watts back into the battery to fill it. I suppose a theoretical 2231.2 Watts to be on the safe side. Why would the spreadsheet need to add both values together and base the Required Total daily Solar output (Sunny) off of this?

I understand if someone tells me that it is doubling the capacity to factor in being under load but for a lot of people, they use their lights and other loads after the sun goes down. At least that is when I use my lights. If I wanted to be certain I have the capacity, that is when I would change the number of days of storage capacity in the spreadsheet, not the amount of PV Panels needed. I can run some lights off of the PV panels without the battery but I can't run my inverter and heavy loads off of them. That's why you need to make sure you have the battery capacity first and then compute the amount of PV panels needed to put the entire capacity back into the batteries in the number of days that you are looking for. Am I wrong?
noob says "thank you" - gotta start somewhere!
Very nice and useful spreadsheet
This has been so tremendously helpful for planning my system, thank you! Curious about why "# of days to recharge while under load" is a user input. How am I determining the answer to this question? Shouldn't this spreadsheet be able to tell me that?
FilterGuy
FilterGuy
>Curious about why "# of days to recharge while under load" is a user input.
> How am I determining the answer to this question?
> Shouldn't this spreadsheet be able to tell me that?
It is asking how quickly the user wants the system to recharge from fully drained and then uses it as an input to determine solar panel sizing. Some users will want just one or two days, others might be willing to wait more days to fully charge.
The alternative is to ask the user for Solar Panel size and then calculate the number of days it will take to recharge, but that would kinda defeat one of the purposes of the spreadsheet.
very helpful
Awesome..Thank you very helpful.
Brilliant, thank you!
Thanks for making this available, great resource.

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