here is a link to the manual (its the 6000 version we have) happy reading
Thanks. I'll take a look, and see if it helps, when I have some moments.
I think like a lot of things now, we are presented with misleading half truths that look good at a glance. we are conned all the time with 'Spin'
Maybe - but ....
take a look at my Growatt Dash ..... the data overview is telling, from the two arrays we have SPPT power as 4877w and 3954w (8.83kW in total) ... The SPPT is the DC from the panels before it gets to the inverter. we then have 4kW going to the Baterry and 4.2kW being exported to the grid.
Indeed - although, as below, I'm not sure that 'export' means quite what it appears to (should!) mean.
Then the very curious figure of 650w consumption .... this is curious as I have the consumer unit switch off - we are not using a watt of energy in the true sense .... I suspect (without knowing 100%) this 650w is the losses when the power goes through the inverter
and they are attributing that 650w to me as if I am getting 650w of free energy ... I would expect the SPPT, the export and the Battery charge are all accurate .... but the consumption, well that sort of implies it is what I am using ... The dashboard is just a misleading con
Certainly seemingly misleading, but I don't know whether it is a deliberate 'con'.
The figures, per se, seem to make sense but I'm very suspicious about what they are calling 'export' and 'consumption'. You have a total of 8.83 kW of solar generation, 3.99 kW of which is charging batteries and 4.19 kW is described as 'export', a total of inverter output usage of 8.18 kW, which is 0.65 kW less than the total (pre-inverter) solar generation - that difference being called 'consumption' on your dashboard.
For an inverter to have an input of 8.83 kW and an output of 8.18 kW indicates an efficiency of 92.6%, which would seem very reasonable/expected (probably higher than I would have guessed) - so I think that the displayed figure of 0.65 kW (the difference between inverter input and output) probably represents the (expected) 'conversion losses' (manifested as heat) in the inverter - even though it is described on the dashboard as 'consumption'.
Looking at you photo, it would appear that the inverter is connected directly to both the grid and the CU (in parallel). If that is the case, then all the inverter could know would be the total of export and 'true usage' (via the CU) combined - i.e. it could not know how much of its output was being exported and how much is actually being 'consumed' (locally, by you). I would therefore think that the figure reported on the dashboard as "export" therefore is probably 'export PLUS true consumption' - and, indeed (unless I'm missing something), there would appear to be no way that the dashboard could know your "true usage/consumption" (via CU).
If my theory is correct, then if the amount of power charging batteries does not change appreciably, I would expect that, providing you were generating at least as much as you 'needed' (for "true use"), and provided the amount of solar generation did not change, when you switched on loads in you house, the dashboards figures for "export" (I believe 'export+true use') and 'consumption (I believe 'inverter losses') would not change appreciably - since the inverter losses would remain the same for an unchanged amount of solar generation, whilst there would simply be a shift of the proportions of power being exported and actually used (leaving total export+true usage {which I think is probably being displayed as 'export'} unchanged)
Does all that make at least some sense?