Re: Texas internet connectivity declining due to blackouts

On 2/17/21 20:04, Lady Benjamin PD Cannon wrote:
Solar can drive any load. But to support heavy loads + regular ones, you'd need a big array and a decent-sized inverter. Double or triple the array if you need to support the same demand during low irradiation days (rain, winter, e.t.c.).
Most grid-tied solar installations will produce more power than they need, at some point. But that does not help if there is no storage and/or the grid fails.
I didn't say solar wasn't suitable for resistive loads. I said batteries aren't... not from a lack of ability, but a lack of capacity given the amount of energy that is required to drive resisitive loads over a given period of time (think, heating bathing water in a 200-litre water tank, with a 4kW element, in the dead of winter).
Let's be clear, solar does not automatically infer batteries also. When I say solar, I mean PV only. When I say solar + batteries, I mean PV + storage. Much of user demand occurs in the evening, when the sunlight is at its lowest. No amount of solar on the roof will offer you power then, and if the grid is massively shrunk, where will your power come from? Fine, you've got a battery - how big does it have to be to support you throughout the night until the sun comes out the following morning, assuming it doesn't storm? Mark.
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Mark Tinka