re system, i am back to a babelfish or a conductor as a reasonable suggestion
Slim
Joined: 05 Mar 2006 Posts: 6612 Location: New England (In the US of A)
Posted: Sat Apr 30, 22 11:26 am Post subject:
Our induction range just has power options from 1-10. The only brain box things it does outside of my control (other than oven timer) is to operate the cooling fan to keep the inductiony bit from overheating.
Manufacturers can make non-ferrous pans work with induction, they just include a steel or iron disk in the bottom of the pan. Our main hassle was finding a moka pot built for induction, but they certainly exist
jema Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 28233 Location: escaped from Swindon
Posted: Sun May 01, 22 7:15 am Post subject:
Latest addition is a "glowstick" yet another device that plugs in, manages to read the smart meter, but then refuses to communicate locally
Instead on request they give you a "mqtt" end point from which you can get the reading every 10 seconds.
I'm calling that a glass half full and the data returned even potentially has a solar export reading.
It also has the gas readings.
More disturbingly the 628 page document they refer you to, to figure out what the readings are include data like "physical attack on prepayment meter" as well as an awful lot about allowed credit.
Smart meters are not exactly there to help!
I have been helping a friend. Choosing modern panels (370-400W per panel) and being aware of the single phase limit of 16 Amps, we ended up with a panel array of 10 panels (3.68kW/370W=10)
We upsized it to 12 panels to give spare capacity on cloudy days.
With regard to shading, panels either come with string inverters or edge inverters - the latter are slightly more expensive BUT with the string inverters the whole string (usually 2 strings in an array) is limited to the power output of the weakest (shaded) panel(s)
With an edge inverter, each panel delivers a maximum power even when a panel is shaded.
Final thought, panels generate energy even when the sun is not out (overcast). Typically, in September, a lightly overcast day drops power generation to about 40%. So 3.68kW generation would drop to 1.48kW.
lots to think about. see panel prices at midsummerwholesale.co.uk
hello and welcome, knowledge shared gains value, thanks
somewhere we have an introduce yourself thread if you would like to do that, please potter in the archives for stuff relevant to your world, lurk rather than post if you prefer, some of us have been here for ages we all made a first post, we are a nice village
crowdfunding half a power station in a year might not be the most cost-effective way of making not-fossil leccy, but it helps, and it gives strength through dispersal which is sensible with critical infrastructure
Certainly useful. As still the best part of 40% of electricity generation is by gas, whittling away at generation is certainly one way to go. The National Grid was a real game changer, and feed in via home solar could be the next one.