bwahahahahaI feel so much safer now
Yep they sure do. I'm getting 3 of them to run parallel for an offgrid rural property.do these work offgrid?
Wow thats interesting. I got my three sent out in April in the midst of the Shanghai lockdowns. I thought things were starting to open up a bit over there.Trying to buy a 3rd inverter to run in parallel. The contact told me the Deye factory has shut down due to China lockdowns, and they don't expect to see any more production for the rest of the year!!
Nice, I'd be interested to hear what they sell for in Aus.FYI - New Aus approved inverters are now available! Been chasing these down for my sisters install...
Joule Power - Inverters and batteries
Joule power is the authorised distributor of ZRGP batteries and DEYE inverters in Australia. We carry a wide range of battery, inverter and All-in-One products to suite your energy storage requirements.joulepower.com.au
Just different generations as far as I can tell.Did we ever figure out the difference between the SG01, SG03, SG04 and SG05 models?
I'm looking to import 2x from China for a 10kW panel installation. Can't tell what the difference is.
The price is very competitive with directly importing from China - plus you get a full warranty & service etc.Nice, I'd be interested to hear what they sell for in Aus.
I have three of those ones here in NZ.
*REALLY* hard answers to find on this - i've tried.Did we ever figure out the difference between the SG01, SG03, SG04 and SG05 models?
I'm looking to import 2x from China for a 10kW panel installation. Can't tell what the difference is.
I understand Australia uses the same (MEN/TN-C-S) earthing system as New Zealand.Hi there...
Great posts and info on this thread.
I am looking at the 5kw myself as an ac coupled battery solution.
The thing I am trying to figure out from all the info is, the neutral earth Bonding in Australia.. Do we need the contactor for the n e bond in ups mode as the wiring rules say the neutral out of the inverter must be unswitched and bonded to installation neutral?
I have seen this ac out neutral Bonding in a few install manuals now and some inverters have this relay internal but have details for an external neutral connection.
Any info, confirmation or links would be muchly appreciated.
Cheers
Xandar
That made sense to me.. The rules say the neutral on ac out has to be bonded back to main neutral (therefore the main MEN) and not to be broken on the ac out side of the inverter.. I just could not find anything locking in (or out) the need for a contactor in Australia .The victron MP2 has that built in but it also has a setting for an externally connected neutral negating the need of the contactor.I understand Australia uses the same (MEN/TN-C-S) earthing system as New Zealand.
If that's the case in your situation, there should be a permanent link between N & E in your main switchboard and therefore you don't need a N-E contactor, as long as this link is maintained when you lose your grid connection and the inverter is supplying your essential loads.
It is best to talk to your electrician about this as it is safety critical. I know this is a DIY forum, but it is very much illegal for someone without electrical registration to do this sort of work (installing LVAC inverters and making changes to domestic switchboards etc, even for off-grid) in Australia.
Hey - everything has been running well for a couple months now.
My inverters dont talk to my BMS, and there is ABSOLUTELY NO NEED TO. I use a raspberry Pi to get info from the BMS & put it into Home Assistant dashboard to check all the details.
My Deye units are configured with max charge/discharge rates - 70A each, so max possibly would be 140A. I've only got 4kw panels max on one - so thats 74A anyway. Each unit pulls max 5kw - 100A max anyway, for a 280Ah pack thats fine.
The inverters allow custom voltage settings for charging (it assumes SLA battery when doing this?) - which I set to 55.2 for Absorb & Equalization - which actually gives 54.7v at the battery (just an odd 0.5v diff for some reason). So it hits 3.418v per cell on charge. Float is then at 54.8 - 54.3v at the battery which is 3.39v/cell. This works beautifully & the charge curve is nice & all behaves well.
I'm super, SUPER happy with the DEYE units - the support/company is a bit meh to deal with, but the product itself is flawless.
The only thing i've had to do is add fans to the external heatsink - 2x92mm ultra silent PC fans are perfect. It was getting pretty warm until full charge on a hot day - I prefer to keep temps to a minimal for longevity.
SolarAssistant.io - simply superb software!!!Hello please how to you get to BMS and Inverter data to home assistant, i want to do that
Are you still running these batteries? I am running same brand but can’t find any more second hand ones. I am using selectronic sp pro.Agreed, I'm actually using VRLA batteries for now, got 40kWh worth of second hand ones for scrap value, so I need an inverter with battery temperature monitoring. So other than the Deye/Sunsynk, it's really only Victron, Selectronic or SMA Sunny Island that I've found so far which have the features I need. And total cost will end up being 2-5 times that of a Deye/Sunsynk by the time I buy the battery inverter and an MPPT solar charge controller.
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How many?Looking to purchase the DEYE SUN-8K-SG05LP1-AU
Where is the best place to buy? Joule Power or is there another importer that will sell to the home owner?
Happy to buy on Alibaba if the price is significantly better. Does the EU suffix matter? I'm unclear if the EU and AU models are different, mainly for CEC requirements.