Showing posts with label SAMIL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SAMIL. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 July 2016

The Solar Saga Continues - An Update

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Back in early 2014 after the vendor and I got jack of the all the hassles with multiple SAMIL inverters, they managed to convince SAMIL that the unit design was flawed and we wanted it ripped out.

The vendor then kindly replaced the SAMIL with an ABB (aka Power One) AURORA inverter to which I added an RS485-to-IP interface, loaded their Aurora Comunicator v2.10.1 PC software and we've been reaping the benefits ever since, with excellent logging and a good UI
 So all has gone wonderfully well since then ... till recently ... when all of a sudden the inverter started to fail with what transpires to be a well known error code of E031

It transpires that after a few years in the field, a particular component has failed in many of these units and they are replaced under their 5yr warranty with little issue.

The only difficulty for me was that my original vendor has gone out of business!

See this page

After some Googling I found the above page and contacted MC Electrical here in Brisbane and they handled the warranty submission, acquisition and installation of a manufacturer-refurbished unit all very fuss-free and professionally, for nothing more than their standard call out rate. 
Hopefully this one will last longer!
They are manufactured by one of the biggest power and energy equipment suppliers in the world so you'd hope this was just one of those post-manufacture flaws which did not get picked up under stress-testing at the design stage.

Sunday, 21 September 2014

Things to Do After an Accident

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Once again, despite best intentions, I have not blogged for a long while ... so much has happened.

We finally bought a fully featured WIndows 8.1 tablet - with all our key requirements:
Full Windows Professional (can run all desktop apps natively)
9~11" form factor
Wireless WAN (aka 3/4G) built in
Full-hosting USB built in
Video out (min VGA pref HDMI)
At least 64GB (pref 128)
SD card if poss
Multiple docking options
  ... all the things I've harped-on in these previous posts
It's the Lenovo Thinkpad 10 and we loooove it

We had the Samil solar inverter replaced with an Aurora ... what a difference!
  • It "just works" ... without error!. 
  • From my records it seems to be producing slightly higher output overall. 
  • I was able to get the RS485 communications and the Aurora Communicator software working with minimal pain and not a lot of extra cost.
All these are topics of blog posts in their own right ... when I get time.

Still not making alternate-income money off internet marketing ... another overdue blog update 


On the security front I've;
  • replaced older wireless security cameras with newer WansCam Fixed and PTZ cameras 
  • switched to another really excellent PC based CCTV management package - Blue Iris
... more Blog-fodder

If any readers want to hear more about any of the above, please do comment as that will give me added incentive to prioritise blogging on the subject

But what prompted this post - 
... was a car accident my daughter was involved in recently ... as a passenger.
It heightened our awareness of the lack of training around What To Do In An Accident and how often we do not have-to-hand the details we need to exchange in those times of stress.

After a very helpful discussion with RACQ we have now put together the following "kit" for each of our cars.
These kits comprise of three key items.
  1. A concise sheet of key things to do/not-do in an accident
    (shared below)
  2. An insurance policy Certificate of Currency with details of 
    • the provider
    • policy number
    • claims hotline number
  3. RACQ Roadside Assist membership details and hotline
The following list is just one I threw together for our vehicles, so don't take it as law, but it might help you form your own if you want to do something similar.
I'm not completely sure about the use of 000 in these situations so I'd appreciate any improvements anyone might like to offer by way of comments.


Things to Do After an Accident

First things first:
  • Never admit liability – don’t apologise or say I’m sorry that I did/didn’t do something
    don’t admit that you are at fault. Even though you may believe your actions caused the accident, leave that decision to the insurer
  • Don’t argue with other drivers.
    The situation is already emotional and tense as it is; things don’t need to get worse
  • If you can safely move your car to the side of the road, do so.
    If it is not safe to move your car for whatever reason, make sure you turn your hazard lights on.
  • Check if anyone is injured – if so call 000 for Ambulance and Police
  • If there is damage to other vehicles which might be more than a $2,500 – call the Police – apparently 131 444 will get local police in most states, otherwise 000
  • Call your parents or close friend if you need moral support 
In order of importance, exchange with other parties ...
  • Car Registration number(s) - particularly of those who hit you or you hit or were pushed into
  • Driver(s) name(s)
  • Drivers License number(s)
  • Insurer(s) - of those who hit you or you hit or were pushed into 
  • Drivers Phone number or Address 
 Other Information to collect if possible
  • Details of the police officer first on the scene
  • Names/Contact details of anyone prepared to be witnesses
  •  If you have the opportunity, take photos of the accident scene before too much gets moved

Other web resources on this topic

Though not a concise list, I eventually found the RACQ do go into detail on this on their web site under the somewhat obscure title of "Unusual Motoring Situations"

Suncorp also offer their "Tips following a car accident"

#Moose has written an excellent Whirlpool wiki post on What to do when you have an accident
It has a great list of phone numbers and covers multiple scenarios

Saturday, 12 April 2014

SAMIL Solar Inverter - NO MORE!

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Its been a long while since I posted on the subject of our solar power experience and all the hassles I was having with our SAMIL® inverter ... June 2013 in fact!
Why so long?
Well really because I got totally frustrated with the manufacturer not supplying a fix for what I believe amounted to a poorly designed product.
It reached the point I was too scared to touch the inverter because when I did, something else would stop functioning correctly.
After having it "off-the-air" for several short periods where it would go into this perpetual rebooting cycle, taking upto several days to recover, I just gave up and manually recorded each day's generation!

The final straw came following a local power outage when the unit yet-again would not come back on-line for days!
I didn't even bother with the manufacturer, I just went straight to the vendor and (unfortunately for them) gave them my feelings in no uncertain terms, telling them to rip it out and replace it with a different make as this would have been the third SAMIL® we had if they just "replaced" it again.
To-boot, we had lost potentially several hundred dollars of generation since the very first unit was installed!
As it turned out, the vendor themselves had gone away from supplying that brand of inverter!

The vendor contract with the Manufacturer was that they could NOT simply remove a Samil without  visiting the site and going through SAMIL® approved recovery procedures. The vendor was very good about fitting us in, but none-the-less we had to wait nearly two weeks (with no generation) before the visit. During that time I resisted the urge to turn the unit on as I'd tried umpteen times and I figured it was best just to leave it in it's non-working state for them to see.

Naturally Murphy's law applied!
The vendor shows up, powers up the inverter and ... it comes on-line!!

Thankfully the tech was thorough, so between us we were able to provide SAMIL® enough evidence that the unit was indeed faulty.  (Log entries ... and the firmware had corrupted itself again so it no longer showed the version) This meant SAMIL® gave the OK to remove the unit.
With the unit gone and the vendor no longer supplying SAMIL® units, I was upgraded to a much more expensive model at no cost to me.

We are now the owners of a much physically bigger (and more noisy) AURORA® inverter which has operated flawlessly since Christmas.

Interestingly, although we might simply have had more sun-hours compared to the same time last year, we have consistently produced more power in these three months!



Last year kW totals for Jan, Feb, Mar

This year totals
 
 +148kW, +279kW, +73kW
So far this month (to 11 April) we've generated

vs 212 for the same number of April days last year, that's a further +64kW
 That's over 500kW more so far this year!

Was there consistently more sun this year or has the new inverter simply been operational more of the time when we're not around to see the old one going off-line?? 

The one down-side of the new inverter is it's limited interface for obtaining stats from the unit.
It does NOT have either LAN or WiFi connectivity, only RS485 connectivity is available which requires an additional converter to interface to a PC ... which I haven't got around to doing yet!
While this doesn't seem complex, I haven't fully researched this yet, so if anyone reading this post already has their AURORA® inverter connected and collecting statistics, I'd love to hear first-hand, how you went about it.

I note that I made comment about the noise of the new inverter.
The SAMIL® was almost totally silent.
The AURORA® has an inverter buzz which increases in volume as the output increases.
This is really only ever going to be an issue if you have the unit mounted inside the dwelling (as we have), but having said that, it really doesn't bother us at all, even at full-power output as the unit is not near bedrooms or directly adjacent to primary living areas.

One other little quirk of the AURORA® is that because I am still manually collecting statistics off the display panel every few days, selection and display of past history is "cumbersome" in that the start-of-reading date constantly defaults back to 01 JAN {currentYEAR}between each individual reading, so for each daily reading you have to first Escape back to the Statistics menu and scroll all the way to the very bottom entry for User Period and press return to then;
  • scroll through the days to the desired start-of-reading date;
  • press return;
  • scroll through the months to the desired {current} month;
  • press return;
  • press return again to accept the current year and move to the end-of-reading values;
  • scroll through the days to the desired end-of-reading date;
  • press return;
  • press return to accept the current month;
  • press return again to accept the current year and display the output for the chosen date;
  • press return to arrive back at the User Period display and do it all again to obtain data for the next day.
Obviously when set up to capture this data remotely, this wouldn't be an issue either.