Hello,
a few days ago, our photovoltaic system was installed. Although it is not yet connected to the grid, it is already producing power for self-consumption.
For fun, I monitored the production, and yesterday it dropped significantly during light rain/heavy cloud cover. Does this happen to you as well?
a few days ago, our photovoltaic system was installed. Although it is not yet connected to the grid, it is already producing power for self-consumption.
For fun, I monitored the production, and yesterday it dropped significantly during light rain/heavy cloud cover. Does this happen to you as well?
A
AndreasPlü26 Aug 2018 10:07You could stand in front of the wind turbine and blow a bit.
Okay, the problem was probably a lack of sunlight – hopefully, there will be a bit more in the coming days after the last few weeks.
I just fell for the promises of the providers (“best yields even in bad weather, blah blah”). And when I saw the minimal yield, I thought I’d start a minor thread. Thanks for the constructive answers, I’m informed now (and maybe other photovoltaic newbies as well).
Okay, the problem was probably a lack of sunlight – hopefully, there will be a bit more in the coming days after the last few weeks.
I just fell for the promises of the providers (“best yields even in bad weather, blah blah”). And when I saw the minimal yield, I thought I’d start a minor thread. Thanks for the constructive answers, I’m informed now (and maybe other photovoltaic newbies as well).
AndreasPlü schrieb:
I just fell for the promises made by the providers ("best yields even in bad weather blah blah"). And when I saw the minimum yield, I thought I’d start a less important thread But thanks for the constructive answers, now I know (and maybe other photovoltaic newbies do too).This is often advertised. But it’s nonsense. The low-light range does not affect the total yield. If your module performs 10% better in a range where only 10% of the total yield is generated, that results in only 1% more total yield. In the strong-light range, a 10% improvement would correspond to over 9% more total yield...