This website claims to explain the Lidi plug in solar There are some errors, the main one is they seem to have mixed up unidirectional and bidirectional RCD/RCBOs with type AC and type A, OK in the main we should not today use type AC, but my solar inverter instructions tell me with that inverter I can use type AC.
So important thing is being bidirectional but being double pole switching and type A or better is also a good thing.
It also fails to say German equivalent to our consumer unit the MCB/RCBO is twice the width of ours, so they do not use the same units as us, as their plugs are not polarised, so all that is the same between the two systems is the voltage.
In Germany the rental sector is far bigger than ours, so very few people in Germany can install solar. And the German system is still not really plug and play, you still need to register that you are using the system, and tell them when you move home.
I can see when you first buy plug in solar you reading the instructions and completing the form and sending it to the DNO, but when you move home, then likely you will forget.
The only way I can see it working safely is for during the 5 yearly EICR the electrician has to put a sticker on the consumer units saying either "Not suitable for solar" or "Plug in solar ready" with the latter the DNO would already have been informed and the second MPAN (Meter Point Administration Number) issued. In which case you would be paid for export.
Some RCBOs do today have a icon saying bidirectional but this is not universal across diffrent makes, so one has to down load the data sheet which one hopes will say something like this:-
But the problems of data sheets not stating if bidirectional has been
talked about here, and we are left lacking information as to if suitable or not. Which is far from ideal.
As to
@Neil Carroll the question has to be, owner occupied or rental? If owner occupied there is nothing to stop solar being installed, be it a fused connection unit (FCU) or direct into the consumer unit (CU) as to if an electrician is required, we need to define electrician, the old definition was "A person who possesses sufficient technical knowledge, relevant practical skills and
experience for the nature of the electrical work undertaken and is able at all times to prevent danger and, where appropriate, injury to him/herself and others." so one could regard oneself as an electrician? But to get the G98 or G99 certificate, I am not sure if it requires membership to some scheme. No way at my age was I crawling on the roof, so I employed a specialist firm, who did it all for me. The certificates allow you to get the MPAN number and be paid for export, so for an owner-occupier it would be daft not to install.
For a tenant which is what plug and play is designed for, he needs to know if the RCD/RCBO is suitable, and he will not be allowed to remove the cover from the consumer unit, so only way is to require either CU or sockets to be marked as suitable for plug and play solar, if done during the EICR then that will take 5 years.
This
Is likely AI generated and unlikely to find it in real life.