dcg9381
Well-known member
As you guys always have good suggestions, ideas, and experience:
I have residential 320A 240V service, which feeds our shop and our house. We are on our own dedicated transformer which takes the 14KV line voltage down to 240V.
The shop has a PV array. The PV array has been sending me error notifications (and shutting down temporarily) due to line voltage that exceeds 264V. It's happening not every day, but about every other day at almost the same time, around 7:40am. It's happened 6 or 7 times so far. The array will reset when line voltage goes back under 264v, but I haven't been able to pull the actual logs from the device.
I called the local utility, they sent someone out (Jerry) - who is great, but isn't exactly a technical guy. He measured line voltage (normal operation) at 255V and said that the utility spec is "240V +/- 7%" - so 255V is within their "acceptable range". He did give me what seems like a bunch of hogwash - indicating that I'd see problems with appliances, HVAC, if I was getting over 264V, but I'm not sure that's right. He's also said no one else is complaining, but no one else is monitoring line voltage minute to minute.
He said that the utility line runs "hot" (255V) intentionally to address some down stream power issues.
Apparently our transformer is a transformer, not a regulator - meaning it's simply a step down on line voltage and does not regulate. Jerry says that they cannot adjust voltage output on a 240V transformer, they can only do that with 3-phase.
The utility asked me to adjust my inverter to accept line voltage over 10%. I can do this, but I declined.
They've escalated me to someone who has the capacity to monitor the actual 14KV lines that are coming in. That person said that their monitored lines have automatic adjustments, but they do not adjust minute to minute, so it's possible that my equipment can detect line voltage issues before they adjust.
Thoughts?
I have residential 320A 240V service, which feeds our shop and our house. We are on our own dedicated transformer which takes the 14KV line voltage down to 240V.
The shop has a PV array. The PV array has been sending me error notifications (and shutting down temporarily) due to line voltage that exceeds 264V. It's happening not every day, but about every other day at almost the same time, around 7:40am. It's happened 6 or 7 times so far. The array will reset when line voltage goes back under 264v, but I haven't been able to pull the actual logs from the device.
I called the local utility, they sent someone out (Jerry) - who is great, but isn't exactly a technical guy. He measured line voltage (normal operation) at 255V and said that the utility spec is "240V +/- 7%" - so 255V is within their "acceptable range". He did give me what seems like a bunch of hogwash - indicating that I'd see problems with appliances, HVAC, if I was getting over 264V, but I'm not sure that's right. He's also said no one else is complaining, but no one else is monitoring line voltage minute to minute.
He said that the utility line runs "hot" (255V) intentionally to address some down stream power issues.
Apparently our transformer is a transformer, not a regulator - meaning it's simply a step down on line voltage and does not regulate. Jerry says that they cannot adjust voltage output on a 240V transformer, they can only do that with 3-phase.
The utility asked me to adjust my inverter to accept line voltage over 10%. I can do this, but I declined.
They've escalated me to someone who has the capacity to monitor the actual 14KV lines that are coming in. That person said that their monitored lines have automatic adjustments, but they do not adjust minute to minute, so it's possible that my equipment can detect line voltage issues before they adjust.
Thoughts?
