this post was submitted on 15 Jul 2025
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Is this because there's no way to dump any excess electric back into the grid? I don't think this is too much of a worry for me though, I don't recall a power outage in the past 8 years of us living here! touch wood
It's a safety requirement. If the power company powers down a part of the grid for workers to safely perform work they don't want your solar to kick in and kill the worker.
If you want your battery or solar to power parts of the house when the grid is down you need islanding. That disconnects part of the house grid from the street grid keeping any workers safe.
No - the inverter needs the 50hz signal from the grid AC to work.
If there is nowhere for the energy to go the inverter will lower the output from the panels. I think the main reason is because if they turn off the grid for maintenance, you cant start exporting and potentially kill the workers. There are also other complications like the inverter needing power before it can create power