I think Ericmark has answered this, but it comes down to the power station being on the end of a line with volt drops. They will have been asked to push a given amount of power into the grid, and for this to happen, their output will need to be above the desired voltage at "some point" in the network by the volt drop in the cables.In the absence of any over-riding 'control systems', I find it very hard to understand why the voltage produced by a generator would increase as the result of an increasing load.
But taken by itself, the voltage at any point doesn't tell you much about the power being shovelled around the grid - other than a knowledge of how the voltage at a generator varies with it's power output. Taking Ericmark's example, the power station could be delivering 100% output and see its voltage rise. However, a very similar voltage would be seen whether it were the sole generator on a lightly loaded grid, or just one of many on a heavily loaded grid.
You are correct, if demand exceeds current supply capacity then the frequency will fall as rotating machines slow down. But, that still tells you nothing about how much demand is actually there - you could overload a grid with 10GW of supply (sunny, breezy day, in summer), or with 60GW of supply (dark, still, cold evening in winter) if demand exceeds supply. So frequency only tells you anything about supply/demand if you actually know either the total load or the total supply - otherwise it only tells you about any imbalance.In terms of frequency, that's true on small scale such as you describe, but if the total load (of the entire grid) starts approaching 'maxing out' of the generating capacity, the frequency will fall.
Agreed. But then you have to contend with the heating "engineers" who still believe that an FCU is the only way to legally connect a boiler.One to me error in our homes wiring is to power the central heating with a FCU, if powered from a plug and socket, then easy enough to unplug from the grid supply and plug into a battery/inverter or generator. Using a FCU seems to me a flawed approch
I bet very few with battery back up are actually connected to allow offline use. For example, on the Solax my brother has, the EPS is a separate set of terminals - and no-one thought to actually run any cables to where they could be useful when completely renovating the house. If it becomes a requirement to fit solar in new builds, you can guarantee that most developers will fit the cheapest option that complies - and won't go to the expense of making it support offline use.So to encourage people to have solar with battery back up does make a lot of sense, but the plug and play is lacking the battery back-up.


