“Our solar power feeds into our local grid for our neighbours to use. We sell the electricity at market rates - which change every 30 minutes. This made us £13.”
Some more details on this would be interesting. We’re currently with Octopus and get just 15p/kWh when we sell back to the grid, but have to pay 25p/kWh when we buy from the grid.
What kind of rates (average?) are you getting, and who’s your supplier?
German here, 0.07€ to the grid, 0.37€ to buy back from the grid. You better believe I’m maximizing self usage with a big battery, two electric cars and a heat pump that can use the concrete floors as a buffer.
Something I've always found funny is the fact that there's a big chunk of people who have only ever encountered a scramble-pad for typing their bank PIN in Runescape
I've encountered this in two places. One was way back in the day on Runescape where they shuffled the keys after every press. The other was much more recently with a bank that had them shuffled randomly on page load, but not moving between key presses. Annoyingly, this bank allowed only logging on to their web service via a 4-digit PIN—not any sort of real password/passphrase.
maybe it's time to switch bank?? This is something I feel really bad with NA banks, in my home country Taiwan, we had 12 digits pins in 2007 before I immigrate to Canada. Now it's 2023 and most banks debit pin is still fucking 4 digits. (good thing the online banking allows longer passphrases in recent years now. ) I don't carry debit cards unless I need to get some cash, otherwise the phone wallet app is the way to go.
I actually have switched banks, though not because of this. I was with the bank in question for a long time because they had a really excellent value proposition in terms of very high savings interest rates and not having charges for things like international transactions. Plus, legally I'm pretty sure the bank is liable for any money I might lose because of being hacked, not me.
This was in Australia, not NA, for what it's worth.
As we move into winter, we’ll switch to a dynamic electricity tariff. That will allow us to charge the battery when power is cheap and then use it when prices are high.
In my country, the power is cheap at night, and high in the day, could someone help me understand this paragraph? The article was very interesting
But because we have a smart meter, our energy price can change every 30 minutes. So if our provider predicts that tomorrow lunchtime will be expensive for electricity, it could charge us more. Or it could tell the battery to take over.
I doubt it’s the cost of electricity itself, but rather that the average European uses a lot less electricity (mainly due to more energy efficient appliances and no AC use).
Some interesting data, although given the high initial cost of installation I feel those “we paid only 1£” are a bit misplaced.
Anyways, I finally scraped together some money and also got a 5kw LiFePO4 battery system yesterday. Still need to install everything DIY, but I will probably hook up some statistics monitoring system as well as the new hybrid inverter has a cool integration with the Home Assistant software.
I’ve been thinking of getting a hybrid inverter (rather than manually moving loads between grid power and inverter/solar power). How much did it set you back?
I’m curious what type of Statistics monitoring system you aiming for @poVoq. I have ordered a 3.7kw panels + special type inverter for direct heating of a boiler and a secondary boiler/other item. And i am intrigued what the monthly differences are in kWh generation and would like to track those. Only I have no idea what I can hook up between the panels and inverter to log.
I only have 2 100a tied to a hybrid inverter but I still don’t understand how anyone installs solar without batteries. Yes, its an extra cost but with the electric prices right now… 😳
It also sucks for those of us renting but the hybrid inverter seems to be ideal. I’ve gutted my electric use to my networking rack, white goods and shower but from tomorrow I should be good to run everything except the shower off a few solar panels and the 2 batteries when it’s a good day like today.
Hopefully the board that’ll let me integrate it into MQTT will be here tomorrow and i can start looking at getting alerts when batteries are 90% so then I know i can run washing machine/dishwasher and hopefully save enough to put into wind for winter, lol.
Screw the electric companies greed! Once everything is setup, i might have to see if i’d save enough buying batteries and using octopus tariff to charge them, although i’m anti smart meter so… 😞
Fucking A. I have a stutter, so it made me quite happy this guy didn’t overlook speech disabilities. Being forced to use the phone is such a pain in the ass.
So cool! I was wondering where the fonts were, but now I’ve found them on your GitHub repo.
One question/curiosity: is the goal to have a font that looks “consumed by time”? or a font that should look as much as possible as in its original time? I ask this because I notice some final letters have small “ink holes”, they aren’t fully filled.
Ah, difficult, they are two different and incomparable concepts :) As they are now, I think the fonts reach the first goal: give the appearance of an old and used book. Which is cool.
For the second goal maybe there’s no need to go to such lengths as you did, I imagine pictures of how those fonts looked in their time maybe exist(?).
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