Interesting observations about the Tesla Powerwall:
The smoke and ash from the wildfires last summer reduced the solar panels'
efficiency dramatically. I hosed them down with water after the air cleared, and
they improved considerably, but still not back up to new condition. I suppose I
could hire someone to clean them, but I don't think I need to. Now that the
rains have come, they are doing pretty well, considering the season.
Sep 2019 produced 1,240 kWh, Sep 2020 produced 978 kWhBecause we are
in the shade most of the time from October to February the panels only generate
a few kWh per day (photo).
An interesting side effect is that we get more
power on cloudy and foggy days than on clear days. I suppose this is due to the
sun reflecting and refracting from the clouds.
I've set my battery
Reserve to 75% for these low-production months. That should last about 16 hours.
Probably that's excessive, based on the outages I've had so far, but better safe
than sorry.
I joined the OhmConnect effort to reduce the need for
"dirty" power production. So when I get a request to save energy, I go full
battery for the hour or two. I "game" the system by resetting the Customize to
Cost Saving, Reserve down to 50% just before and during the hour or two and
reset to 75% after, and Edit Price Schedule to Peak for just the hour or two of
the requested saving period. It works pretty well. Instead of predicted usage of
about 1 kWh, I get 0 usage.
It's interesting that even when all the
appliances are off, I still see a background power usage of 300-400 W.
Presumably, that's the "power vampires" that suck power continually.
The Tesla PowerWall app is very useful for tracking energy usage,
monitoring solar power produced, checking the battery level, and setting custom
criteria. I check it multiple times per day.
Monday, January 4, 2021
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