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GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Michael Martin5-Dec-17 2:00
professionalMichael Martin5-Dec-17 2:00 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Jochen Arndt4-Dec-17 23:14
professionalJochen Arndt4-Dec-17 23:14 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Mycroft Holmes4-Dec-17 23:25
professionalMycroft Holmes4-Dec-17 23:25 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Jörgen Andersson4-Dec-17 23:43
professionalJörgen Andersson4-Dec-17 23:43 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Jochen Arndt4-Dec-17 23:44
professionalJochen Arndt4-Dec-17 23:44 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Kenneth Haugland5-Dec-17 0:04
mvaKenneth Haugland5-Dec-17 0:04 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
kalberts5-Dec-17 3:00
kalberts5-Dec-17 3:00 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
kalberts5-Dec-17 2:20
kalberts5-Dec-17 2:20 
Quote:
Now I'm looking for and efficient 3 phase battery solution.
In case you are NOT joking... (The above is the sort of joke EE guys might crack!):

There is no such thing as "phases" in battery power. With 3-phase AC, (in the most common layout, you have 4 wires coming into your house. One is neutral, the 3 others carry a voltage varying along a 50 Hz (Europe) or 60 Hz (US) sine curve, relative to the neutral line. The 3 are "out of step" with each other, by one third of the entire 50/60 Hz sine curve, i.e. the voltage on the second wire reaches it peak 1/150 (US: 1/180) sec after the peak of the first wire, the third wire peak comes 2/150 (US: 2/180) sec after the first one - and after 3/150 (US: 3/180) sec, the first wire is at its next peak.

Battery voltage is flat, it doesn't come in sine curves. It has no peak recurring every 1/50 (US: 1/60) second. If you need that, you may use the battery power to drive a DC motor that pulls a generator (i.e. a dynamo), which may provide either a single sine-curve voltage, or three that is out of step, like your old 3-phase power supply. Today, the motor and dynamo is frequently replaced with electronics that do the same thing without moving parts, and with lower losses; it is often termed an "inverter".

Practically all your electric appliances do NOT use 3phase power: They hook up to the neutral wire and one of the 3, ignoring the remaining two. So they see only a single sine curve voltage, a single phase. Your power company is very happy if you hook up your dishwasher between wire 1 and neutral, your washing machine between wire 2 and neutral, and your electric heater between line 3 and neutral, in particular if you run them at the same time. If you put them all on the same wire, leaving the other two un-utilized, it might contribute to imbalance of the power supply system. (It is less of a problem if your 1000-houshold neighbourhood hooks up to the same supply transformer, but it is nevertheless a good practice. The decision which wire to use is done when your fuse box is installed: The circuit feeding your dishwasher hooks up to power wire 1, the circuit to you laundry room hooks to power wire 2 etc. So you don't have to worry about this in your daily life, but if you build a new house, the electrician doing the hookup should be informed about your major power surges, so that those circuits are distributed over the 3 power lines.

There ARE appliances that hook up to all three power wires (plus neutral), usually those containing large electrical motors driving e.g. huge compressors for AC or heat pumps, or heavy machine tools like big saws etc. These either have a fixed power connection, or a plug that looks very different from your ordinary plug. Most homes do not have them; a domestic-model cooler drawing less than 2000W usually uses an ordinary plug for 1-phase current.

So, essentially, you don't have to worry about 3-phase. You get yourself a 1-phase inverter (of sufficient power) and plug all your ordinary 1-phase equipment into that.

BUT... Be realistic about the battery capacities! An ordinary car battery has a capacity of maybe 60 Ah (it varies, but 60 Ah is typical). That is at 12V. So the energy is 12V*60Ah = 720Wh, or in more familiar terms, 0.72 kWh. If you plug in a 2 kW heating fan (i.e. one consuming 2 kWh per hour), the battery is completely drained in about 20 minutes. Even a modern, energy-efficient dishwasher og washing machine uses around 1 kWh per run, so a single 60 Ah battery is significantly below the capacity required by a single run. You may need to fill your entire basement with batteries...

Modern Li-Ion batteries are more compact and have higher capacity. But be realistic: Check your power meter, see how much electricity your household uses per day on the average. Expect the peak days to be at least twice the average. For dimensioning, in middle Europe (i.e. not very cold climate), it is common to estimate 9-10,000 kWh/year, i.e. 25-30 kWh a day. To supply a single day of power needs from batteries (assuming no refillng available), would require 40 standard 12V 60Ah batteries.

If you can guarantee that your solar panels every day throughout the entire year will receive enough sunshine to recharge your batteries with (at least) 25-30 kWh/day. That might be realistic in California, but not here in Norway, especially not at winter time.

My advise: Restrict solar power and batteries to low-power use, such as LED lights, burglar alarm, network router, tabletop radio (but NOT a huge stereo system that can shake the entire house), charging your phones, pads and laptops (but not your full-size tower PC with a 30 in screen).

For heating (including hot water), you will be much better off using thermal collectors - they pick up 4-5 times as much energy from the sun. Depending on you local conditions, a wood stove may be nice (and I love the radiated heat, the smell and the sound). For cooking, gas is standard in many cultures. Leave vacuum cleaners, dishwashers, laundry machines and other high-effect equipment to the old power line hookup.

In case of a power fallout you still have light, heating, communication and at least some entertainment. If there is a risk of longer fallouts, you might invest in a gasoline/diesel powered generator for emergency cases - but models big enough to feed, say, your laundry machine (maybe it draws 2000W when heating the water) are large, expensive and noisy. You don't want to use them except in emergency situations.

A final note about 3-phase, which you probably can ignore: There is an alternate wiring scheme, with no 4th neutral wire: You hook up ordinary 1-phase power consumers between wire 1 and 2, between 2 and 3 or between 3 and 1. This is referred to as "delta" or "IT" wiring (as opposed to the far more common "star" or "TN" wiring I assumed above). In Norway, IT wiring is still common, roughly 80% of the installations, but TN wiring is used in new setups. Few other countries use IT wiring to any degree. (It is used internally in some hospitals, due to certain safety issues.)
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Mycroft Holmes5-Dec-17 12:06
professionalMycroft Holmes5-Dec-17 12:06 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Dan Neely5-Dec-17 3:46
Dan Neely5-Dec-17 3:46 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
BarrRobot5-Dec-17 23:25
BarrRobot5-Dec-17 23:25 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
Duncan Edwards Jones5-Dec-17 2:34
professionalDuncan Edwards Jones5-Dec-17 2:34 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
kalberts5-Dec-17 4:33
kalberts5-Dec-17 4:33 
GeneralRe: 12 Volt Residential Systems Pin
jschell5-Dec-17 13:16
jschell5-Dec-17 13:16 
GeneralThe beauty of life... Pin
Jeremy Falcon4-Dec-17 14:19
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dandy724-Dec-17 16:51
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Jeremy Falcon4-Dec-17 19:55
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Slacker0074-Dec-17 21:39
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Mycroft Holmes4-Dec-17 22:05
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Cornelius Henning5-Dec-17 0:37
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Jeremy Falcon5-Dec-17 5:26
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Jeremy Falcon5-Dec-17 5:34
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BillWoodruff5-Dec-17 0:15
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Jeremy Falcon5-Dec-17 5:27
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